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Lynchburg, Virginia

Lynchburg is an independent city in the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States. First settled in 1757 by ferry owner John Lynch, the city's population was 79,009 at the 2020 census, making Lynchburg the 11th most populous city in Virginia.[3] Located in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains along the banks of the James River, Lynchburg is known as the "City of Seven Hills" or the "Hill City".[4] In the 1860s, Lynchburg was the only city in Virginia that was not recaptured by the Union before the end of the American Civil War.[5]

Lynchburg, Virginia
Downtown Lynchburg in 2021
Nickname(s): 
"The Hill City"; "City of Seven Hills"
Location within the Commonwealth of Virginia
Lynchburg
Lynchburg
Coordinates: 37°24′13″N 79°10′12″W / 37.40361°N 79.17000°W / 37.40361; -79.17000
CountryUnited States
StateVirginia
CountyNone (Independent city)
Founded1786
Incorporated (town)1805
Incorporated (city)1852
Named forJohn Lynch
Government
 • TypeCouncil–Manager
 • MayorStephanie Reed
 • Vice MayorChris Faraldi
 • CouncilLynchburg City Council
Area
 • Independent city49.53 sq mi (128.27 km2)
 • Land48.97 sq mi (126.84 km2)
 • Water0.55 sq mi (1.43 km2)
Elevation
630 ft (192 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Independent city79,009
 • Rank11th in Virginia
 • Density1,600/sq mi (620/km2)
 • Urban
116,636 (US: 271st)
 • Metro
261,593 (US: 189th)
 • Demonym
Lynchburger
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
ZIP code(s)
24501, 24502, 24503, 24504, 24505, 24551
Area code(s)434
FIPS code51-680
GNIS feature ID1479007[2]
Websitelynchburgva.gov

Lynchburg lies at the center of a wider metropolitan area close to the geographic center of Virginia. It is the fifth-largest MSA in Virginia, with a population of 261,593. It is the site of several institutions of higher education, including Virginia University of Lynchburg, Randolph College, University of Lynchburg, Central Virginia Community College and Liberty University. Nearby cities include Roanoke, Charlottesville, and Danville.

History Edit

Monacan Indian Nation and other Siouan Tutelo-speaking tribes had lived in the area for over 10,000 years, driving the Virginia Algonquians eastward to the coastal areas.[6] Explorer John Lederer visited one of the Siouan villages (Saponi) in 1670, on the Staunton River at Otter Creek, southwest of the present-day city, as did the Thomas Batts and Robert Fallam expedition in 1671.

Siouan peoples occupied this area until about 1702; they had become weakened because of high mortality from infectious diseases. The Seneca people, who were part of the Haudenosaunee, or Iroquois Confederacy based in New York, defeated them. The Seneca had ranged south while seeking new hunting grounds through the Shenandoah Valley to the West. At the Treaty of Albany in 1718, the Iroquois Five Nations ceded control of their land east of the Blue Ridge Mountains, including Lynchburg, to the Colony of Virginia; they confirmed this in 1721.

Founding and early growth Edit

First settled by Anglo-Americans in 1757, Lynchburg was named for its founder, John Lynch. When about 17 years old, Lynch started a ferry service at a ford across the James River to carry traffic to and from New London, where his parents had settled. The "City of Seven Hills" quickly developed along the hills surrounding Lynch's Ferry.[citation needed]

In 1786, Virginia's General Assembly recognized Lynchburg, the settlement by Lynch's Ferry on the James River. The James River Company had been incorporated the previous year (and President George Washington was given stock, which he donated to charity) in order to "improve" the river down to Richmond, which was growing and was named as the new Commonwealth's capital. Shallow-draft James River bateau provided a relatively easy means of transportation through Lynchburg down to Richmond and eventually to the Atlantic Ocean. Rocks, downed trees, and flood debris were constant hazards, so their removal became expensive ongoing maintenance. Lynchburg became a tobacco trading, then commercial, and much later an industrial center.

Eventually the state built a canal and towpath along the river to make transportation by the waterway easier, and especially to provide a water route around the falls at Richmond, which prevented through navigation by boat. By 1812, U.S. Chief Justice John Marshall, who lived in Richmond, reported on the navigation difficulties and construction problems on the canal and towpath.

The General Assembly recognized the settlement's growth by incorporating Lynchburg as a town in 1805; it was not incorporated as a city until 1852. In between, Lynch built Lynchburg's first bridge across the James River, a toll structure that replaced his ferry in 1812. A toll turnpike to Salem, Virginia was begun in 1817. Lynch died in 1820 and was buried beside his mother in the graveyard of the South River Friends Meetinghouse. Quakers later abandoned the town because of their opposition to slaveholding. Presbyterians took over the meetinghouse and adapted it as a church. It is now preserved as a historic site.

To avoid the many visitors at Monticello, Thomas Jefferson in 1806 developed a plantation and house near Lynchburg, called Poplar Forest. He often visited the town, noting, "Nothing would give me greater pleasure than to be useful to the town of Lynchburg. I consider it as the most interesting spot in the state." In 1810, Jefferson wrote, "Lynchburg is perhaps the most rising place in the U.S.... It ranks now next to Richmond in importance...."[7]

Early Lynchburg residents were not known for their religious enthusiasm. The established Church of England supposedly built a log church in 1765. In 1804, evangelist Lorenzo Dow wrote: "...where I spoke in the open air in what I conceived to be the seat of Satan's Kingdom. Lynchburg was a deadly place for the worship of God'." That referred to the lack of churches, which was corrected the following year. Itinerant Methodist Francis Asbury visited the town; Methodists built its first church in 1805. Lynchburg hosted the last Virginia Methodist Conference that bishop Asbury attended (February 20, 1815).[8] As Lynchburg grew, prostitution and other "rowdy" activities became part of the urban mix of the river town. They were often ignored, if not accepted, particularly in a downtown area referred to as the "Buzzard's Roost."[citation needed] Methodist preacher and later bishop John Early became one of Lynchburg's civic leaders; unlike early Methodist preachers who had urged abolition of slavery during the Great Awakening; Early was of a later generation that had accommodated to this institution in the slave societies of the South.

On December 3, 1840, the James River and Kanawha Canal from Richmond reached Lynchburg. It was extended as far as Buchanan, Virginia in 1851, but never reached a tributary of the Ohio River as originally planned.[9] Lynchburg's population exceeded 6,000 by 1840, and a water works system was built. Floods in 1842 and 1847 wreaked havoc with the canal and towpath. Both were repaired. Town businessmen began to lobby for a railroad, but Virginia's General Assembly refused to fund such construction. In 1848 civic boosters began selling subscriptions for the Lynchburg and Tennessee Railroad.

By the 1850s, Lynchburg (along with New Bedford, Massachusetts) was among the richest towns per capita in the US.[10] Tobacco (including the manufacture of plug tobacco in factories using rented slave labor), slave-trading, general commerce, and iron and steel manufacturing powered the economy.[11][12]

Railroads had become the wave of the future. Construction on the new Lynchburg and Tennessee railroad had begun in 1850 and a locomotive tested the track in 1852. A locomotive called the "Lynchburg" blew up in Forest, Virginia (near Poplar Forest) later that year, showing the new technology's dangers. By the Civil War, two more railroads had been built, including the South Side Railroad from Petersburg. It became known as the Atlantic, Mississippi and Ohio Railroad in 1870, then a line in the Norfolk and Western Railway, and last as part of the Norfolk Southern Railway.[13] The Orange and Alexandria Railroad stopped in Lynchburg.

American Civil War Edit

During the American Civil War, Lynchburg served as a Confederate transportation hub and supply depot. It had 30 hospitals, often placed in churches, hotels, and private homes.

In June 1864, Union forces of General David Hunter approached within 1-mile (1.6 km) as they drove south from the Shenandoah Valley. Confederate troops under General John McCausland harassed them. Meanwhile, the city's defenders hastily erected breastworks on Amherst Heights. Defenders were led by General John C. Breckinridge, who was an invalid from wounds received at the Battle of Cold Harbor. Union General Philip Sheridan appeared headed for Lynchburg on June 10, as he crossed the Chickahominy River and cut the Virginia Central Railroad. However, Confederate cavalry under General Wade Hampton, including the 2nd Virginia Cavalry from Lynchburg under General Thomas T. Munford, defeated his forces at the two-day Battle of Trevillian Station in Louisa County, and they withdrew. This permitted fast-marching troops under Confederate General Jubal Early to reach within four miles of Lynchburg on June 16 and tear up the tracks of the Orange and Alexandria Railroad to inhibit travel by Union reinforcements, while Confederate reinforcements straggled in from Charlottesville.

On June 18, 1864, in the Battle of Lynchburg, Early's combined forces, though outnumbered, repelled Union General Hunter's troops. Lynchburg's defenders had taken pains to create an impression that the Confederate forces within the city were much larger than they were in fact. For example, a train was continuously run up and down the tracks while drummers played and Lynchburg citizens cheered as if reinforcements were disembarking. Local prostitutes took part in the deception, misleading their Union clients about the large number of Confederate reinforcements. Narcissa Owen (Cherokee), wife of the president of the Lynchburg and Tennessee Railroad, later wrote about her similar deception of Union spies.[14]

From April 6 to 10, 1865, Lynchburg served as the capital of Virginia after the Confederate government fled from Richmond. Governor William Smith and the Commonwealth's executive and legislative branches escaped to Lynchburg as Richmond surrendered on April 3. Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendered to Gen. Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse, roughly 20-mile (32 km) east of Lynchburg, ending the Civil War. Lynchburg surrendered on April 12, to Union General Ranald S. Mackenzie.[15]

Ten days later, Confederate Brigadier General James Dearing died. He was a native of nearby Campbell County and descendant of John Lynch; he had been wounded on April 6 at High Bridge during that Appomattox campaign. Mackenzie had visited his wounded friend and former West Point classmate, easing the transition of power.[15]

Post-Civil War recovery Edit

The railroads that had driven Lynchburg's economy were destroyed by the war's end. The residents of the city deeply resented occupying forces under General J. L. Gregg, and worked more readily with his affable successor General N.M. Curtis.[citation needed] Thomas J. Kirkpatrick became superintendent for the public education established under Virginia's Reconstruction-era legislature and Constitution of 1869, and built four new public schools. Previously, the only education for students from poor families was provided through St. Paul's Episcopal Church.

Floods in 1870 and 1877 destroyed the city's bridges (which were rebuilt) and the James River and Kanahwa Canal (which was not rebuilt). The towpath was used as the bed for laying the rails of the Richmond and Allegheny Railroad, a project conceived five decades earlier.

The city limits expanded in 1874. In 1881 that railroad was completed to Lynchburg, and another railroad reached it through the Shenandoah Valley. Lynchburg had a telegraph, about 15,000 residents, and the beginnings of a streetcar system. Many citizens, believing their city crowded enough, did not join the boosters who wanted Lynchburg to become the junction of that valley line and what became the Norfolk and Western Railroad, so the junction was moved to Big Lick. This later developed as the City of Roanoke.

 
Lynchburg, circa 1919

In the latter 19th century, Lynchburg embraced manufacturing (the city being sometimes referred to as the "Pittsburgh of the South").[citation needed] On a per capita basis, it became one of the wealthiest cities in the United States. In 1880, Lynchburg resident James Albert Bonsack invented the first cigarette-rolling machine. Shortly thereafter Dr. Charles Browne Fleet, a physician and pharmacological tinkerer, introduced the first micro-enema to be mass marketed over-the-counter. By the city's centennial in 1886, banking activity had increased sixfold over the 1860 level, which some attributed to slavery's demise. The Lynchburg Cotton Mill and Craddock-Terry Shoe Co. (which would become the largest shoe manufacturer in the South) were founded in 1888. The Reusens hydroelectric dam began operating in 1903 and soon delivered more power.[16]

In 1886, Virginia Baptists founded a training school, the Lynchburg Baptist Seminary. It began to offer a college-level program to African-American students in 1900. Now named the Virginia University of Lynchburg, it is the city's oldest institution of higher learning. Not far outside town, Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Sweet Briar College were founded as women's colleges in 1893 and 1901, respectively. In 1903, the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) founded Lynchburg Christian College (later Lynchburg College) in what had been the Westover Hotel resort, which went bankrupt in the Panic of 1901. During the 2018–19 school year, the college's name was changed to the University of Lynchburg, reflecting its expansion of graduate-level programs and research. Lynchburg's first public library, Jones Memorial Library, opened in 1907.[16]

 
World War I Memorial in downtown Lynchburg

During World War I, the city's factories supported the war effort, and the area also supplied troops. The city powered through the Roaring Twenties and survived the Great Depression. Its first radio station, WLVA, began in 1930, and its airport opened in 1931. In 1938, the former fairgrounds were redeveloped as side-by-side baseball and football stadiums. [16]

World War II and after Edit

Lynchburg's factories again worked 24 hours daily during World War II. In 1955, both General Electric and Babcock & Wilcox built high technology factories in the area.[16]

Lynchburg lost its bid to gain access to an interstate highway. In the late 1950s, interested citizens, including Virginia Senator Mosby G. Perrow, Jr., asked the federal government to change its long-planned route for the interstate highway, now known as I-64, between Clifton Forge and Richmond.[17]

Since the 1940s, maps of the federal interstate highway system showed a proposed northern route, bypassing the manufacturing centers at Lynchburg and Roanoke. But federal officials assured Virginia that the state would decide the route.[18] Although initially favoring that northern route, Virginia's State Highway Commission eventually supported a southern route from Richmond via US-360 and US-460, which connected Lynchburg and Roanoke via US-220 from Roanoke to Clifton Forge, then continued west following US-60 into West Virginia.[19] However, in July 1961, Governor J. Lindsay Almond and US Secretary of Commerce Luther Hodges announced that the route would not be changed.[20] Lynchburg was left as the only city with a population in excess of 50,000 (at the time) that was not served by an interstate.[21]

The Virginia State Colony for Epileptics and Feebleminded (now known as the Central Virginia Training School), was established outside Lynchburg in Madison Heights. For several decades throughout the mid-20th century, the state of Virginia authorized compulsory sterilization of the mentally retarded for the purpose of eugenics. The operations were carried out at the institution. An estimated 8,300 Virginians were relocated to Lynchburg and sterilized there, making the city a "dumping ground" of sorts for the feeble-minded, poor, blind, epileptic, and those otherwise seen as genetically "unfit".[22] Carrie Buck challenged the state sterilization, but it was finally upheld by the United States Supreme Court in Buck v. Bell. She was classified as "feeble-minded" and sterilized while a patient at the Virginia State Colony.

Sterilizations were carried out for 35 years until 1972, when the operations were halted. Later in the late 1970s, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a class-action lawsuit against the state of Virginia on behalf of the sterilization victims. In the settlement, victims received formal apologies from the state and counseling if they chose, but the judiciary denied requests for the state to pay for reverse sterilization operations. In 1994, Buck's sterilization and litigation were featured as a television drama, Against Her Will: The Carrie Buck Story. The Manic Street Preachers address the issue in their song "Virginia State Epileptic Colony" on their 2009 album Journal for Plague Lovers.

Modern revitalization Edit

Liberty University, founded in 1971 as Lynchburg Baptist College and renamed in 1985, is one of the country's largest institutions of higher education and the largest employer in the Lynchburg region. The university states that it generates over $1 billion in economic impact to the Lynchburg area annually.[23][24][25]

Lynchburg has ten recognized historic districts, four of them in the downtown residential area.[26][27] Since 1971, 40 buildings have been individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[28]

Downtown Lynchburg has undergone significant revitalization, with hundreds of new loft apartments created through adaptive reuse of historic warehouses and mills. Since 2000, downtown has attracted private investments of more than $110 million, and business activity increased by 205% from 2004 to 2014.[29] In 2014, 75 new apartment units were added to downtown Lynchburg, with 155 further units under construction, increasing the number of housing units downtown by 48% from 2010 to 2014.[29]

In 2015, the $5.8-million Lower Bluffwalk pedestrian street zone opened.[30] Notable projects underway in downtown by the end of 2015 include the $25-million Virginian Hotel restoration project, a $16.6-million restoration of the Academy Center of the Arts, and $4.6-million expansion of Amazement Square Children's Museum.[31][32][33][34]

Timeline Edit

Timeline of Lynchburg, Virginia

Geography Edit

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 49.6 square miles (128.5 km2), of which 49.2 square miles (127.4 km2) is land and 0.5 square miles (1.3 km2) (1.0%) is water.[50]

Neighborhoods Edit

The first neighborhoods of Lynchburg developed upon seven hills adjacent to the original ferry landing.[51] These neighborhoods include:

  • Court House Hill (original hill)
  • College Hill
  • Daniel's Hill
  • Diamond Hill (Grace Street, Washington Street)
  • Federal Hill
  • Franklin Hill
  • Garland Hill
  • White Rock Hill (Florida Avenue)

Other major neighborhoods, with more upside, include Tinbridge Hill, Boonsboro, Trents Ferry, Rivermont, Fairview Heights (Campbell Ave corridor), Jackson Heights, Federal Hill (Federal Street, Jackson Street, Harrison Street) Fort Hill, Forest Hill (Old Forest Rd. Area), Timberlake, Windsor Hills, Sandusky, Sheffield, Linkhorne, Cornerstone and Wyndhurst.

Climate Edit

Lynchburg has a four-season humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cfa), with cool winters and hot, humid summers. The monthly daily average temperature ranges from 35.9 °F (2.2 °C) in January to 76.0 °F (24.4 °C) in July.[52] Nights tend to be significantly cooler than days throughout much of the year due in part to the moderate elevation. In a typical year, there are 27.4 days with a high temperature 90 °F (32 °C) or above, and 6.2 days with a high of 32 °F (0 °C) or below.[52][53] Snowfall averages 11.6 inches (29 cm) per season but this amount varies highly with each winter; the snowiest winter is 1995–96 with 56.8 in (144 cm) of snow, but the following winter recorded only trace amounts, the least on record.[54]

Temperature extremes range from 106 °F (41 °C), recorded on July 10, 1936, down to −11 °F (−24 °C), recorded on February 20, 2015.[52] However, several decades may pass between 100 and 0 °F (38 and −18 °C) readings, with the last such occurrences being July 8, 2012 and February 20, 2015, respectively.[52]

Climate data for Lynchburg, Virginia (Lynchburg Regional Airport), 1991–2020 normals,[a] extremes 1893–present[b]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 80
(27)
82
(28)
92
(33)
95
(35)
100
(38)
104
(40)
106
(41)
105
(41)
102
(39)
98
(37)
84
(29)
79
(26)
106
(41)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 67
(19)
70
(21)
79
(26)
86
(30)
89
(32)
93
(34)
95
(35)
94
(34)
90
(32)
84
(29)
75
(24)
68
(20)
96
(36)
Average high °F (°C) 46.0
(7.8)
49.6
(9.8)
58.2
(14.6)
68.8
(20.4)
75.9
(24.4)
83.2
(28.4)
86.9
(30.5)
85.2
(29.6)
78.9
(26.1)
68.9
(20.5)
58.2
(14.6)
49.0
(9.4)
67.4
(19.7)
Daily mean °F (°C) 35.9
(2.2)
38.8
(3.8)
46.4
(8.0)
56.1
(13.4)
64.2
(17.9)
72.0
(22.2)
76.0
(24.4)
74.5
(23.6)
68.0
(20.0)
57.0
(13.9)
46.5
(8.1)
38.9
(3.8)
56.2
(13.4)
Average low °F (°C) 25.8
(−3.4)
28.0
(−2.2)
34.6
(1.4)
43.5
(6.4)
52.5
(11.4)
60.7
(15.9)
65.0
(18.3)
63.8
(17.7)
57.1
(13.9)
45.1
(7.3)
34.8
(1.6)
28.9
(−1.7)
45.0
(7.2)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 7
(−14)
12
(−11)
18
(−8)
29
(−2)
38
(3)
50
(10)
56
(13)
55
(13)
43
(6)
30
(−1)
21
(−6)
14
(−10)
5
(−15)
Record low °F (°C) −10
(−23)
−11
(−24)
5
(−15)
20
(−7)
30
(−1)
40
(4)
49
(9)
45
(7)
35
(2)
21
(−6)
8
(−13)
−4
(−20)
−11
(−24)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 3.46
(88)
2.91
(74)
3.76
(96)
3.45
(88)
3.98
(101)
3.82
(97)
4.19
(106)
3.22
(82)
3.96
(101)
3.12
(79)
3.39
(86)
3.50
(89)
42.76
(1,086)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 3.5
(8.9)
3.6
(9.1)
2.4
(6.1)
0.1
(0.25)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
2.0
(5.1)
11.6
(29)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 9.9 9.5 11.1 10.2 12.1 10.9 11.8 9.7 8.5 7.7 8.1 9.4 118.9
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 1.7 1.8 1.2 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.9 5.7
Mean monthly sunshine hours 167.0 168.2 221.7 243.7 272.3 287.5 273.4 256.6 226.5 215.4 169.6 155.9 2,657.8
Percent possible sunshine 54 56 60 62 62 65 61 61 61 62 55 52 60
Source: NOAA (sun 1961–1990)[52][53][55]


Seven Hills Edit

One of the most prominent nicknames of Lynchburg is the "City of Seven Hills." This is due to one prominent feature of its geography, the seven hills that are spread throughout the region. The seven hills are: College Hill, Garland Hill, Daniel's Hill, Federal Hill, Diamond Hill, White Rock Hill, and Franklin Hill.[56]

Adjacent counties Edit

Demographics Edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18304,630
18406,39538.1%
18508,07126.2%
18606,853−15.1%
18706,825−0.4%
188015,959133.8%
189019,70923.5%
190018,891−4.2%
191029,49456.1%
192030,0702.0%
193040,66135.2%
194044,5419.5%
195047,7277.2%
196054,79014.8%
197054,083−1.3%
198066,74323.4%
199066,049−1.0%
200065,269−1.2%
201075,56815.8%
202079,0094.6%
U.S. Decennial Census[57]
1790–1960[58] 1900–1990[59]
1990–2000[60] 2010[61] 2020[62]

2020 census Edit

Lynchburg city, Virginia - Demographic Profile
(NH = Non-Hispanic)
Race / Ethnicity Pop 2010[61] Pop 2020[62] % 2010 % 2020
White alone (NH) 47,574 47,654 62.96% 60.31%
Black or African American alone (NH) 21,984 21,228 29.09% 26.87%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) 200 200 0.26% 0.25%
Asian alone (NH) 1,852 1,752 2.45% 2.22%
Pacific Islander alone (NH) 27 34 0.04% 0.04%
Some Other Race alone (NH) 184 669 0.24% 0.85%
Mixed Race/Multi-Racial (NH) 1,447 3,592 1.91% 4.55%
Hispanic or Latino (any race) 2,300 3,880 3.04% 4.91%
Total 75,568 79,009 100.00% 100.00%

Note: the U.S. Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos can be of any race.

2010 census Edit

As of the 2010 census,[63] there were 75,568 people, 25,477 households, and 31,992 families residing in the city. The population density was 1,321.5 people per square mile (510.2 people/km2). There were 27,640 housing units at an average density of 559.6 units per square mile (216.1 units/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 63.0% White, 29.3% African American, 0.2% Native American, 2.5% Asian, 0.04% Pacific Islander, 0.63% from other races, and 1.7% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 3.0% of the population.

There were 25,477 households, out of which 27.8% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 41.6% were married couples living together, 16.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 38.8% were non-families. 32.7% of all households were made up of individuals, and 12.9% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.30 and the average family size was 2.92.

The age distribution of the city had: 22.1% under the age of 18, 15.5% from 18 to 24, 25.3% from 25 to 44, 20.8% from 45 to 64, and 16.3% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 35 years. For every 100 females, there were 84.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 79.1 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $32,234, and the median income for a family was $40,844. Males had a median income of $31,390 versus $22,431 for females. The per capita income for the city was $18,263. About 12.3% of families and 15.9% of the population were below the poverty line, including 22.4% of those under age 18 and 10.7% of those age 65 or over.

Lynchburg ranks below the 2006 median annual household income for the U.S. as a whole, which was $48,200, according to the US Census Bureau.[64]

In 2009, almost 27% of Lynchburg children lived in poverty. The state average that year was 14%.[65]

Economy Edit

 
Bank of the James in Lynchburg
 
Allied Arts Building in Downtown Lynchburg, completed in 1931

Of Virginia's larger metro areas, Forbes Magazine ranked Lynchburg the 5th best place in Virginia for business in 2006, with Virginia being the best state in the country for business.[66] In the same survey, Lynchburg achieved the rank of 109th in the nation.

Industries within the Lynchburg MSA include nuclear technology, pharmaceuticals, and material handling. A diversity of small businesses with the region has helped maintain a stable economy and has minimized the impacts of nation-wide economic downturns.[67][68]

Government Edit

 
Lynchburg City Hall

Lynchburg uses a council-manager system. The Lynchburg City Council is composed of seven members that each serve a four-year term. There are four wards that elect a member; the remaining three are elected in at-large elections in which the top three candidates obtain a seat. The City Council is also responsible for appointing a city manager, city attorney, and city clerk.

The current council members are:[69]

  • MaryJane Dolan (Mayor) (Ward I)
  • Beau Wright (Vice Mayor) (at-large)
  • Sterling Wilder (Ward II)
  • Jeff Helgeson (Ward III)
  • Chris Faraldi (Ward IV)
  • Randy Nelson (at-large)
  • Treney Tweedy (at-large)

List of mayors of Lynchburg, Virginia Edit

  • John Wiatt, 1806[70]
  • Roderick Taliaferro, 1807
  • Samuel J. Harrison, 1808
  • John Lynch, Jr., 1809
  • M. Lambert, 1810
  • John Schoolfield, 1811
  • James Stewart, 1812
  • Robert Morris, 1813
  • Samuel J. Harrison, 1814
  • James Stewart, 1815
  • John M. Gordon, 1816
  • Samuel J. Harrison, 1817
  • William Morgan, 1818
  • James Stewart, 1819
  • John Thurman, 1820
  • Micajah Davis, 1821
  • John Hancock, 1822
  • Thomas A. Holcombe, 1823
  • Albon McDaniel, 1824
  • John Victor, 1825
  • Albon McDaniel, 1826
  • Christopher Winfree, 1827
  • Albon McDaniel, 1828
  • Ammon Hancock, 1829
  • Elijah Fletcher, 1830
  • John R. D. Payne, 1831
  • Elijah Fletcher, 1833
  • John M. Warwick, 1833
  • Henry M. Didlake, 1834
  • Samuel J. Wiatt, 1835
  • Pleasant Labby, 1836
  • Ammon Hancock, 1837
  • Martin W. Davenport, 1838
  • John R. D. Payne, 1839
  • Samuel Nowlin, 1840
  • Ammon Hancock, 1841
  • Henry M. Didlake, 1842
  • Edwin Mathews, 1843
  • David W. Burton, 1844
  • M. Hart, 1845
  • Henry M. Didlake, 1846
  • Daniel J. Warwick, 1847
  • Henry 0 Schoolfield, 1848
  • Edwin Mathews, 1849
  • Henry M. Didlake, 1850
  • William D. Branch, 1851
  • Albon McDaniel, 1869
  • James M. Cobbs, 1870
  • George H. Burch, 1872
  • Samuel A. Bailey, 1876
  • Samuel Griffin Wingfield, 1880[71]
  • A. H. Pettigrew, 1882
  • Nathaniel Clayton Manson, Jr., 1884–1891[72]
  • Robert D. Yancey, circa 1900[73]
  • Royston Jester, Jr., circa 1918[74]
  • ?
  • L. E. Litchford, circa 1937[75]
  • Clarence G. Burton, 1946–1948[76]
  • Jerome V. Morrison, circa 1952[75]
  • John L. Suttenfield, circa 1953–1956[75]
  • Leighton B. Dodd, Circa 1973
  • Elliott Shearer, circa 1982[77]
  • Jimmie Bryan, circa 1986[74]
  • ?
  • M.W. "Teedy" Thornhill Jr., 1991–1992[78]
  • James S. Whitaker, 1994–1998[79]
  • Carl B. Hutcherson, Jr., circa 2002–2005[80]
  • Michael Gillette, circa 2015[81]
  • Joan Foster, 2016–2018[81]
  • Treney Tweedy, 2018–2020 [82]
  • MaryJane Dolan, 2020–2022 [83]
  • Stephanie Reed, 2023–present [84]

Education Edit

Colleges and universities Edit

Public schools Edit

Private schools Edit

 
DeMoss Learning Center at Liberty University

Primary and secondary schools Edit

Public schools Edit

 
Thomas C. Miller Elementary School for Innovation

The city is served by the Lynchburg City Public Schools. The school board is appointed by the Lynchburg City Council.

  • E. C. Glass High School – 2111 Memorial Ave[91]
  • Heritage High School – 3020 Wards Ferry Rd[92]
  • Linkhorne Middle School – 2525 Linkhorne Dr[93]
  • Paul Laurence Dunbar Middle School – 1208 Polk St[94]
  • Sandusky Middle School – 805 Chinook Place[95]
  • William Marvin Bass Elementary School[96]
  • Bedford Hills Elementary School[97]
  • Dearington Elementary School for Innovation[98]
  • Heritage Elementary School[99]
  • Linkhorne Elementary School[100]
  • Paul M. Munro Elementary School
  • Perrymont Elementary School
  • Robert S. Payne Elementary School
  • Sandusky Elementary School
  • Sheffield Elementary School
  • Thomas C. Miller Elementary School for Innovation[101]

Lynchburg is also home to the Central Virginia Governor's School for Science and Technology located in Heritage High School. This magnet school consists of juniors and seniors selected from each of the Lynchburg-area high schools. As one of eighteen Governor's Schools in Virginia, the Central Virginia Governor's School focuses on infusing technology into both the math and science curriculum.

Private schools Edit

The city is also home to a number of religious and non-religious private schools, including Appomattox Christian Academy, Desmond T Doss Christian Academy, James River Day School, Liberty Christian Academy, New Covenant Classical Christian School, Temple Christian School, Virginia Episcopal School, and New Vistas School.

Health care Edit

  • Centra Lynchburg General Hospital – Lynchburg, VA
  • Centra Virginia Baptist Hospital – Lynchburg, VA
  • Community Health Center – Lynchburg, VA[102]

Transportation Edit

Local transit Edit

The Greater Lynchburg Transit Company (GLTC) operates the local public transport bus service within the city. The GLTC additionally provides the shuttle bus service on the Liberty University campus.

The GLTC selected a property directly across from Lynchburg-Kemper Street Station as its top choice of sites upon which to build the new transfer center for their network of public buses. They were interested in facilitating intermodal connections between GLTC buses and the intercity bus and rail services which operate from that location. The project was completed and opened to the public on June 16, 2014.[103][104]

On August 23, 2017, the GLTC launched The Hopper, a free downtown circulator bus with a $479,348 grant from the Virginia Smart Scale program.[105][106] On June 29, 2019, the GLTC ended service for The Hopper due to "consistently low ridership" and the expiration of a $117,820 state grant that covered operating costs.[107]

 
Greyhound and Amtrak operate from Kemper Street Station

Intercity transit Edit

Intercity passenger rail and bus services are based out of Kemper Street Station, a historic, three-story train station recently restored and converted by the city of Lynchburg to serve as an intermodal hub for the community. The station is located at 825 Kemper Street.[108]

Bus Edit

Greyhound Lines located their bus terminal in the main floor of Kemper Street Station following its 2002 restoration.[108] Greyhound offers transport to other cities throughout Virginia, the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.

Rail Edit

Amtrak's long distance Crescent and a Northeast Regional connect Lynchburg with Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Charlotte, Atlanta, Birmingham, New Orleans and intermediate points.

In October 2009, Lynchburg became the southern terminus for a Northeast Regional that previously had overnighted in Washington. The forecast ridership was 51,000 for the 180-mile extension's first year, but the actual count was triple that estimate, and the train paid for itself without any subsidy.[109] By FY 2015, the Regional had 190,000 riders. The Lynchburg station alone served a total of 85,000 riders in 2015. It is located in the track level ground floor of Kemper Street Station.[110]

Lynchburg has two major freight railroads. It is the crossroads of two Norfolk Southern lines. One is the former mainline of the Southern Railway, upon which Kemper Street Station is situated. NS has a classification yard located next to the shopping mall. Various yard jobs can be seen. Railfans who wish to visit the NS Lynchburg yard are advised to inquire with an NS official. CSX Transportation also has a line through the city and a small yard.

Air Edit

Lynchburg Regional Airport is solely served by American Eagle to Charlotte, North Carolina. American Eagle, a subsidiary of American Airlines, is the only current scheduled airline service provider, with seven daily arrivals and departures to Charlotte Douglas International Airport. In recent years air travel has increased, with 157,517 passengers flying in and out of the airport in 2012, representing 78% of the total aircraft load factor for that time period.

Highway Edit

Primary roadways include U.S. Route 29, U.S. Route 501, U.S. Route 221, running north–south, and U.S. Highway 460 (Richmond Highway), running east–west. While Lynchburg is the largest city in Virginia not served by an interstate, parts of Route 29 have been upgraded to interstate standards and significant improvements have been made to Highway 460 in the immediate vicinity to Lynchburg and suburban areas.

Arts and culture Edit

In a Forbes magazine survey, Lynchburg ranked 189 for cultural and leisure out of 200 cities surveyed.[111]

  • Lynchburg Symphony Orchestra. Created in 1983, throughout the years a variety of music has been presented, from the classical to the patriotic to the popular.[112]
  • Academy of Fine Arts. Greater Lynchburg's center for arts, culture, and community building.[113]
  • Commerce Street Theater.[114]
  • Renaissance Theater. The longest-running community theater in the area, open for over 25 years.
  • Lynchburg Art Club. Formed in March 1895.
  • Opera on the James. Opera performed by national and regional artists in a wide variety of venues since 2005 including classic grand operas, small scale lesser-known operas, contemporary works, family operas, concerts of diverse repertoire, lectures, school tours and free community outreach.
  • The Maier Museum of Art. The museum is located on the campus of Randolph College and features works by American artists of the 19th and 20th centuries.
  • Riverviews Artspace. A nonprofit arts organization presenting contemporary art exhibitions, multi-disciplinary programs, and events.
  • Wolfbane Productions. An award-winning performing arts organization with year-round performances and cultural events.

Attractions and entertainment Edit

The following attractions are located within the Lynchburg MSA:

  • Amazement Square: Central Virginia's first multidisciplinary, hands-on children's museum.
  • Appomattox Courthouse: The site of the Battle of Appomattox Court House, where the surrender of the Confederate Army under Robert E. Lee to Union commander Ulysses S. Grant took place on April 9, 1865, effectively ending the American Civil War.
  • Crabtree Falls: The longest waterfall east of the Mississippi River, is located in Nelson County, Virginia. The trail leads hikers along a 1.7-mile hike with views of five cascades of Crabtree Falls. The land formerly in private ownership prior to the late 1970s is in the George Washington National Forest. Crabtree Falls sits near two undeveloped mountainous areas designated as Wilderness areas: The Priest & Three Ridges respectfully. Since 1982, thirty (30) people have fallen to their deaths due to navigating too far away from the trail. There are warning signs at the public trailhead because of this.
  • James River Heritage Trail: Composed of two smaller trails, the Blackwater Creek Bikeway and RiverWalk.[115]
  • Trails of Blackwater Creek: a network of paved and unpaved trails weaving through the Blackwater Creek natural area.[116][117]
  • Miller-Claytor House: Pre-19th century townhouse where Thomas Jefferson allegedly proved to the owner of the house's garden that tomatoes were not poisonous by eating one of the fruit.[118] Home was dismantled in 1936 and rebuilt at its Riverside Park location, where the garden was also restored.
  • National D-Day Memorial: Located in Bedford, Virginia, it commemorates all those who served the United States during the D-Day Invasion of Normandy, France on June 6, 1944, during World War II.
  • Nature Zone: A division of Lynchburg Parks and Recreation.
  • Old City Cemetery Museums & Arboretum: The most visited historic site in the City of Lynchburg. Established in 1806, the Old City Cemetery is Lynchburg's only publicly owned burial ground and one of its oldest cemeteries.[119] It is also home to the largest public collection of heirloom or "antique" roses in the Commonwealth of Virginia.[120]
  • The Old Court House: This Hill City landmark was built in 1855. Fashioned as a Greek temple high above the James River, it is now the home of Central Virginia's best collection of memorabilia, furnishings, costumes and industrial history.[citation needed]
  • Peaks of Otter: Three mountain peaks in the Blue Ridge Mountains, overlooking the town of Bedford, Virginia and in prominent view throughout most of Lynchburg.
  • Point of Honor: The Federal-era mansion of Dr. George Cabell, Sr., friend and physician of the patriot Patrick Henry, and John S. Langhorne whose daughter Elizabeth Langhorne Lewis led the fight for women's suffrage.[121] His granddaughters include Mrs. Charles Dana Gibson, the original "Gibson Girl" and Nancy Langhorne, Lady Astor, the first woman elected to the British Parliament.[122]
  • Poplar Forest: Thomas Jefferson's retreat home. Jefferson designed the octagonal house during his second term as president and sojourned here in his retirement to find rest and leisure and escape public life. Ongoing restoration and archaeology is taking place at the site.[needs update] A future access road/parkway is planned between the property and the Wyndhurst community with an existing signalized intersection on Enterprise Drive.[needs update]
  • Smith Mountain Lake: The largest lake entirely within Virginia, located in Bedford County, Virginia and Franklin County, Virginia (part of the Lynchburg MSA), the man-made lake features about 20,000 surface acres and 500 miles of shoreline.

Sports and recreation Edit

 
Percival's Island section of James River Heritage Trail in Downtown Lynchburg
 
Hollins Mill Waterfall on the Blackwater Creek Greenway, James River Heritage Trail
 
Lynchburg City Stadium – Calvin Falwell Field Lynchburg Hillcats

Lynchburg is home to sporting events and organizations including:

Notable people Edit

Media Edit

Print Edit

  • The News & Advance, Lynchburg's daily newspaper that serves the Central Virginia region, owned by Berkshire Hathaway.
  • Lynchburg Living, bi-monthly periodical
  • The Lynchburg Guide, quarterly resource directory
  • The Burg, weekly entertainment newspaper published by The News & Advance
  • Lynch's Ferry, a biannual journal of local history
  • Liberty Champion, Liberty University student newspaper
  • "The Bulletin", small monthly newspaper

Television Edit

Lynchburg shares a television and radio market with Roanoke.

Radio Edit

  • WJJX 102.7, Urban Contemporary based in Lynchburg
  • WLNI 105.9, Talk Radio based in Lynchburg
  • WIQO-FM 100.9, Part of the Virginia Talk Radio Network based in Forest
  • WLEQ 106.9, BOB-FM, Good Times, Great Oldies, Home of Rock'n'Roll's Great Hits, Lynchburg
  • WNRN (WNRS 89.9), Modern Rock based in Charlottesville
  • WROV 96.3, Classic Rock based in Roanoke
  • WKHF 93.7, Hot AC based in Lynchburg
  • WRMV 94.5, Southern Gospel based in Madison Heights
  • WRVL 88.3, The Journey, Top 40 CCM Christian Radio based in Lynchburg
  • WRXT 90.3, Contemporary Christian Radio based in Lynchburg, part of the "Spirit FM" (WPAR) network of Contemporary Christian stations
  • W227BG 93.3 ESPN Sports translator of 106.3 Gretna – Translator at Timberlake – Low power
  • WSLC 94.9, Country based in Roanoke
  • WSLQ 99.1, Adult Contemporary based in Roanoke
  • WSNZ 102.7, Adult Contemporary based in Roanoke
  • WHTU 103.9, Oldies based in Lynchburg
  • WVBE 100.1, Urban Contemporary based in Lynchburg
  • WVTF 89.1, Public Radio based in Blacksburg
  • W208AP 89.5 Radio IQ – BBC News/NPR talk translator of 89.9 WWVT-FM Ferrum – Translator at Candlers Mountain – Low power
  • WWEM 91.7, Classical Music simulcast of WWED-FM in Spotsylvania/Fredericksburg
  • WWMC 90.9, Christian CHR/Rock radio based at Liberty University
  • WWZW 96.7, Hot AC based in Buena Vista
  • WXLK 92.3, Top-40 Radio based in Roanoke
  • WYYD 107.9, Country based in Lynchburg
  • WZZI/WZZU 101.5, Roanoke/ 97.9, Lynchburg, Classic/Modern Rock based in Lynchburg
  • WAMV 1420, Southern Gospel based in Madison Heights
  • WBRG 1050, Talk/ Sports based in Lynchburg also simulcast on 104.5
  • WKPA 1390, Religious based in Lynchburg
  • WLLL 930, Gospel Music based in Lynchburg
  • WLVA 580, (silent), based in Lynchburg
  • WVGM 1320, ESPN Sports based in Lynchburg
  • WKDE-FM 105.5, Classic & Modern Country based in Altavista
  • WGVY 1000 AM, Talk Radio based in Altavista
  • WAWX 101.7 FM, Contemporary Christian Radio in Lynchburg, VA. AIR 1 RADIO.</ref> https://tunein.com/radio/Air1-Radio-1017-s29872/

Sister cities Edit

Politics Edit

United States presidential election results for Lynchburg, Virginia[133]
Year Republican Democratic Third party
No.  % No.  % No.  %
2020 17,097 47.02% 18,048 49.63% 1,218 3.35%
2016 17,982 50.43% 14,792 41.48% 2,883 8.09%
2012 19,806 54.34% 15,948 43.76% 694 1.90%
2008 17,638 51.36% 16,269 47.37% 434 1.26%
2004 14,400 54.67% 11,727 44.52% 213 0.81%
2000 12,518 53.25% 10,374 44.13% 614 2.61%
1996 11,441 49.72% 10,281 44.68% 1,290 5.61%
1992 12,518 50.13% 9,587 38.40% 2,864 11.47%
1988 15,323 64.04% 8,279 34.60% 324 1.35%
1984 18,047 67.41% 8,542 31.91% 183 0.68%
1980 15,245 62.44% 7,783 31.88% 1,389 5.69%
1976 14,564 61.18% 8,227 34.56% 1,013 4.26%
1972 13,259 74.11% 4,208 23.52% 423 2.36%
1968 9,943 54.34% 4,305 23.53% 4,051 22.14%
1964 10,044 59.66% 6,758 40.14% 32 0.19%
1960 7,271 59.33% 4,961 40.48% 24 0.20%
1956 6,806 64.81% 3,362 32.01% 334 3.18%
1952 7,090 64.75% 3,848 35.14% 11 0.10%
1948 2,373 35.17% 2,480 36.76% 1,894 28.07%
1944 2,396 35.69% 4,302 64.08% 15 0.22%
1940 1,966 29.65% 4,656 70.22% 9 0.14%
1936 1,373 26.96% 3,697 72.60% 22 0.43%
1932 1,200 24.31% 3,656 74.07% 80 1.62%
1928 2,730 57.88% 1,987 42.12% 0 0.00%
1924 606 21.49% 2,086 73.97% 128 4.54%
1920 609 22.30% 2,096 76.75% 26 0.95%
1916 353 19.16% 1,465 79.53% 24 1.30%
1912 111 6.03% 1,487 80.82% 242 13.15%
1908 473 32.64% 962 66.39% 14 0.97%
1904 292 22.44% 995 76.48% 14 1.08%
1900 660 37.65% 1,081 61.67% 12 0.68%
1896 1,647 48.92% 1,657 49.21% 63 1.87%
1892 1,358 35.63% 2,422 63.55% 31 0.81%
1888 1,796 46.52% 2,054 53.20% 11 0.28%
1884 1,760 47.75% 1,926 52.25% 0 0.00%
1880 861 38.06% 1,400 61.89% 1 0.04%

Lynchburg has traditionally been a conservative stronghold. This predates the influence of Liberty University; it was one of the first areas of the state where the old-line Byrd Democrats began splitting their tickets at the national level. However, conservative Democrats continued to hold most local offices well into the 1970s.

However, the Democratic Party has seen a gradual increase in popularity in the city since the 1990s, and Lynchburg's political atmosphere has become increasingly moderate. In the 2020 United States presidential election, a plurality of voters in Lynchburg voted for Democratic challenger Joe Biden over Republican incumbent Donald Trump.[134] Biden was the first Democrat to carry Lynchburg since Harry S. Truman in 1948.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Mean monthly maxima and minima (i.e. the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month) calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020.
  2. ^ Official records for Lynchburg were kept at the Weather Bureau Office from January 1893 to July 1944, and at Lynchburg Regional since August 1944. For more information, see ThreadEx

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Bibliography Edit

  • Richard Edwards, ed. (1855), "Lynchburg", Statistical Gazetteer of the State of Virginia, Richmond{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Sketch Book of Lynchburg, Va., Lynchburg: Edward Pollock and S.C. Judson, 1887
  • George E. Waring, Jr.; U.S. Department of the Interior, Census Office (1887), "Virginia: Lynchburg", Report on the Social Statistics of Cities: Southern and the Western States, Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, pp. 60–64
  • Blackford, Charles M. Jr. (1891). Annals of the Lynchburg Home Guard. Lynchburg, Va.: Lynchburg Home Guard – via John W. Rohr, Electric Power Printer and Binder.
  • "Lynchburg", Rand, McNally & Co.'s Handy Guide to the Southeastern States, Chicago: Rand, McNally & Co., 1899 – via Internet Archive
  • W. Asbury Christian (1900), Lynchburg and its People, J. P. Bell Company, printers, OCLC 2847898
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lynchburg" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 169.
  • Federal Writers' Project (1941), "Lynchburg", Virginia: a Guide to the Old Dominion, American Guide Series, Oxford University Press, pp. 246+, ISBN 9780403021956 – via Google Books
  • Ruth H. Blunt (1965). "Lynchburg's Tobacco Warehouses". Virginia Cavalcade. Library of Virginia. 14. ISSN 0042-6474.
  • Schewel, Michael J. (1981). "Local Politics in Lynchburg, Virginia, in the 1880s Michael J. Schewel". Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 89 (2): 170–180. JSTOR 4248478.
  • Houck, Peter W. (1986). A Prototype of a Confederate Hospital Center in Lynchburg, Virginia. Lynchburg, Va.: Warwick House Publishing. LCCN 86-50952.
  • Steven Elliot Tripp (1993). "Race, Class, and Religion: Lynchburg, Virginia's 'Great Revival of 1871'". Mid-America. Loyola University Chicago. 75. ISSN 0026-2927.
  • John Nagy (1995). . Essays in History. University of Virginia. 37. ISSN 0071-1411. Archived from the original on October 26, 2014. Retrieved August 25, 2017.
  • Steven Elliot Tripp (1999). Yankee Town, Southern City: Race and Class Relations in Civil War Lynchburg. New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-8237-8.
  • Clifton Potter; Dorothy Potter (2004). Lynchburg: a City Set on Seven Hills. Charleston, SC: Arcadia. ISBN 978-0-7385-2461-0.
  • James M. Elson. Lynchburg, Virginia: the First Two Hundred Years 1786–1986. Lynchburg: Warwick House Publishers, 2004.
  • Paul T. Hellmann (2006). "Virginia: Lynchburg". Historical Gazetteer of the United States. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 1-135-94859-3.
  • Dorothy Potter; Clifton Potter (2007). Lynchburg: 1757–2007. Images of America. Arcadia. ISBN 978-1-4396-3363-2.

External links Edit

Government
  • Official website
Other
  •   Geographic data related to Lynchburg, Virginia at OpenStreetMap
  • Lynchburg History, old photos of Lynchburg
  • Lynchburg Online
  • The News & Advance, Lynchburg's daily newspaper
  • "Blog". Lynchburg Museum. April 18, 2023.
  • "City of Lynchburg". County and City Records. Richmond: Library of Virginia.
  • Items related to Lynchburg, Virginia, various dates (via Digital Public Library of America)
  • Lynchburg Glass Company - glass insulators

lynchburg, virginia, other, places, with, same, name, lynchburg, disambiguation, lynchburg, independent, city, commonwealth, virginia, united, states, first, settled, 1757, ferry, owner, john, lynch, city, population, 2020, census, making, lynchburg, 11th, mos. For other places with the same name see Lynchburg disambiguation Lynchburg is an independent city in the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States First settled in 1757 by ferry owner John Lynch the city s population was 79 009 at the 2020 census making Lynchburg the 11th most populous city in Virginia 3 Located in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains along the banks of the James River Lynchburg is known as the City of Seven Hills or the Hill City 4 In the 1860s Lynchburg was the only city in Virginia that was not recaptured by the Union before the end of the American Civil War 5 Lynchburg VirginiaIndependent cityDowntown Lynchburg in 2021SealCoat of armsPolice patchNickname s The Hill City City of Seven Hills Location within the Commonwealth of VirginiaLynchburgShow map of VirginiaLynchburgShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 37 24 13 N 79 10 12 W 37 40361 N 79 17000 W 37 40361 79 17000CountryUnited StatesStateVirginiaCountyNone Independent city Founded1786Incorporated town 1805Incorporated city 1852Named forJohn LynchGovernment TypeCouncil Manager MayorStephanie Reed Vice MayorChris Faraldi CouncilLynchburg City CouncilArea 1 Independent city49 53 sq mi 128 27 km2 Land48 97 sq mi 126 84 km2 Water0 55 sq mi 1 43 km2 Elevation630 ft 192 m Population 2020 Independent city79 009 Rank11th in Virginia Density1 600 sq mi 620 km2 Urban116 636 US 271st Metro261 593 US 189th DemonymLynchburgerTime zoneUTC 5 EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT ZIP code s 24501 24502 24503 24504 24505 24551Area code s 434FIPS code51 680GNIS feature ID1479007 2 Websitelynchburgva wbr govLynchburg lies at the center of a wider metropolitan area close to the geographic center of Virginia It is the fifth largest MSA in Virginia with a population of 261 593 It is the site of several institutions of higher education including Virginia University of Lynchburg Randolph College University of Lynchburg Central Virginia Community College and Liberty University Nearby cities include Roanoke Charlottesville and Danville Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding and early growth 1 2 American Civil War 1 3 Post Civil War recovery 1 4 World War II and after 1 5 Modern revitalization 1 6 Timeline 2 Geography 2 1 Neighborhoods 2 2 Climate 2 3 Seven Hills 2 4 Adjacent counties 3 Demographics 3 1 2020 census 3 2 2010 census 4 Economy 5 Government 5 1 List of mayors of Lynchburg Virginia 6 Education 6 1 Colleges and universities 6 1 1 Public schools 6 1 2 Private schools 6 2 Primary and secondary schools 6 2 1 Public schools 6 2 2 Private schools 7 Health care 8 Transportation 8 1 Local transit 8 2 Intercity transit 8 2 1 Bus 8 2 2 Rail 8 2 3 Air 8 2 4 Highway 9 Arts and culture 10 Attractions and entertainment 11 Sports and recreation 12 Notable people 13 Media 13 1 Print 13 2 Television 13 3 Radio 14 Sister cities 15 Politics 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 Bibliography 20 External linksHistory EditMonacan Indian Nation and other Siouan Tutelo speaking tribes had lived in the area for over 10 000 years driving the Virginia Algonquians eastward to the coastal areas 6 Explorer John Lederer visited one of the Siouan villages Saponi in 1670 on the Staunton River at Otter Creek southwest of the present day city as did the Thomas Batts and Robert Fallam expedition in 1671 Siouan peoples occupied this area until about 1702 they had become weakened because of high mortality from infectious diseases The Seneca people who were part of the Haudenosaunee or Iroquois Confederacy based in New York defeated them The Seneca had ranged south while seeking new hunting grounds through the Shenandoah Valley to the West At the Treaty of Albany in 1718 the Iroquois Five Nations ceded control of their land east of the Blue Ridge Mountains including Lynchburg to the Colony of Virginia they confirmed this in 1721 Founding and early growth Edit First settled by Anglo Americans in 1757 Lynchburg was named for its founder John Lynch When about 17 years old Lynch started a ferry service at a ford across the James River to carry traffic to and from New London where his parents had settled The City of Seven Hills quickly developed along the hills surrounding Lynch s Ferry citation needed In 1786 Virginia s General Assembly recognized Lynchburg the settlement by Lynch s Ferry on the James River The James River Company had been incorporated the previous year and President George Washington was given stock which he donated to charity in order to improve the river down to Richmond which was growing and was named as the new Commonwealth s capital Shallow draft James River bateau provided a relatively easy means of transportation through Lynchburg down to Richmond and eventually to the Atlantic Ocean Rocks downed trees and flood debris were constant hazards so their removal became expensive ongoing maintenance Lynchburg became a tobacco trading then commercial and much later an industrial center Eventually the state built a canal and towpath along the river to make transportation by the waterway easier and especially to provide a water route around the falls at Richmond which prevented through navigation by boat By 1812 U S Chief Justice John Marshall who lived in Richmond reported on the navigation difficulties and construction problems on the canal and towpath The General Assembly recognized the settlement s growth by incorporating Lynchburg as a town in 1805 it was not incorporated as a city until 1852 In between Lynch built Lynchburg s first bridge across the James River a toll structure that replaced his ferry in 1812 A toll turnpike to Salem Virginia was begun in 1817 Lynch died in 1820 and was buried beside his mother in the graveyard of the South River Friends Meetinghouse Quakers later abandoned the town because of their opposition to slaveholding Presbyterians took over the meetinghouse and adapted it as a church It is now preserved as a historic site To avoid the many visitors at Monticello Thomas Jefferson in 1806 developed a plantation and house near Lynchburg called Poplar Forest He often visited the town noting Nothing would give me greater pleasure than to be useful to the town of Lynchburg I consider it as the most interesting spot in the state In 1810 Jefferson wrote Lynchburg is perhaps the most rising place in the U S It ranks now next to Richmond in importance 7 Early Lynchburg residents were not known for their religious enthusiasm The established Church of England supposedly built a log church in 1765 In 1804 evangelist Lorenzo Dow wrote where I spoke in the open air in what I conceived to be the seat of Satan s Kingdom Lynchburg was a deadly place for the worship of God That referred to the lack of churches which was corrected the following year Itinerant Methodist Francis Asbury visited the town Methodists built its first church in 1805 Lynchburg hosted the last Virginia Methodist Conference that bishop Asbury attended February 20 1815 8 As Lynchburg grew prostitution and other rowdy activities became part of the urban mix of the river town They were often ignored if not accepted particularly in a downtown area referred to as the Buzzard s Roost citation needed Methodist preacher and later bishop John Early became one of Lynchburg s civic leaders unlike early Methodist preachers who had urged abolition of slavery during the Great Awakening Early was of a later generation that had accommodated to this institution in the slave societies of the South On December 3 1840 the James River and Kanawha Canal from Richmond reached Lynchburg It was extended as far as Buchanan Virginia in 1851 but never reached a tributary of the Ohio River as originally planned 9 Lynchburg s population exceeded 6 000 by 1840 and a water works system was built Floods in 1842 and 1847 wreaked havoc with the canal and towpath Both were repaired Town businessmen began to lobby for a railroad but Virginia s General Assembly refused to fund such construction In 1848 civic boosters began selling subscriptions for the Lynchburg and Tennessee Railroad By the 1850s Lynchburg along with New Bedford Massachusetts was among the richest towns per capita in the US 10 Tobacco including the manufacture of plug tobacco in factories using rented slave labor slave trading general commerce and iron and steel manufacturing powered the economy 11 12 Railroads had become the wave of the future Construction on the new Lynchburg and Tennessee railroad had begun in 1850 and a locomotive tested the track in 1852 A locomotive called the Lynchburg blew up in Forest Virginia near Poplar Forest later that year showing the new technology s dangers By the Civil War two more railroads had been built including the South Side Railroad from Petersburg It became known as the Atlantic Mississippi and Ohio Railroad in 1870 then a line in the Norfolk and Western Railway and last as part of the Norfolk Southern Railway 13 The Orange and Alexandria Railroad stopped in Lynchburg American Civil War Edit During the American Civil War Lynchburg served as a Confederate transportation hub and supply depot It had 30 hospitals often placed in churches hotels and private homes In June 1864 Union forces of General David Hunter approached within 1 mile 1 6 km as they drove south from the Shenandoah Valley Confederate troops under General John McCausland harassed them Meanwhile the city s defenders hastily erected breastworks on Amherst Heights Defenders were led by General John C Breckinridge who was an invalid from wounds received at the Battle of Cold Harbor Union General Philip Sheridan appeared headed for Lynchburg on June 10 as he crossed the Chickahominy River and cut the Virginia Central Railroad However Confederate cavalry under General Wade Hampton including the 2nd Virginia Cavalry from Lynchburg under General Thomas T Munford defeated his forces at the two day Battle of Trevillian Station in Louisa County and they withdrew This permitted fast marching troops under Confederate General Jubal Early to reach within four miles of Lynchburg on June 16 and tear up the tracks of the Orange and Alexandria Railroad to inhibit travel by Union reinforcements while Confederate reinforcements straggled in from Charlottesville On June 18 1864 in the Battle of Lynchburg Early s combined forces though outnumbered repelled Union General Hunter s troops Lynchburg s defenders had taken pains to create an impression that the Confederate forces within the city were much larger than they were in fact For example a train was continuously run up and down the tracks while drummers played and Lynchburg citizens cheered as if reinforcements were disembarking Local prostitutes took part in the deception misleading their Union clients about the large number of Confederate reinforcements Narcissa Owen Cherokee wife of the president of the Lynchburg and Tennessee Railroad later wrote about her similar deception of Union spies 14 From April 6 to 10 1865 Lynchburg served as the capital of Virginia after the Confederate government fled from Richmond Governor William Smith and the Commonwealth s executive and legislative branches escaped to Lynchburg as Richmond surrendered on April 3 Gen Robert E Lee surrendered to Gen Ulysses S Grant at Appomattox Courthouse roughly 20 mile 32 km east of Lynchburg ending the Civil War Lynchburg surrendered on April 12 to Union General Ranald S Mackenzie 15 Ten days later Confederate Brigadier General James Dearing died He was a native of nearby Campbell County and descendant of John Lynch he had been wounded on April 6 at High Bridge during that Appomattox campaign Mackenzie had visited his wounded friend and former West Point classmate easing the transition of power 15 Post Civil War recovery Edit The railroads that had driven Lynchburg s economy were destroyed by the war s end The residents of the city deeply resented occupying forces under General J L Gregg and worked more readily with his affable successor General N M Curtis citation needed Thomas J Kirkpatrick became superintendent for the public education established under Virginia s Reconstruction era legislature and Constitution of 1869 and built four new public schools Previously the only education for students from poor families was provided through St Paul s Episcopal Church Floods in 1870 and 1877 destroyed the city s bridges which were rebuilt and the James River and Kanahwa Canal which was not rebuilt The towpath was used as the bed for laying the rails of the Richmond and Allegheny Railroad a project conceived five decades earlier The city limits expanded in 1874 In 1881 that railroad was completed to Lynchburg and another railroad reached it through the Shenandoah Valley Lynchburg had a telegraph about 15 000 residents and the beginnings of a streetcar system Many citizens believing their city crowded enough did not join the boosters who wanted Lynchburg to become the junction of that valley line and what became the Norfolk and Western Railroad so the junction was moved to Big Lick This later developed as the City of Roanoke nbsp Lynchburg circa 1919 In the latter 19th century Lynchburg embraced manufacturing the city being sometimes referred to as the Pittsburgh of the South citation needed On a per capita basis it became one of the wealthiest cities in the United States In 1880 Lynchburg resident James Albert Bonsack invented the first cigarette rolling machine Shortly thereafter Dr Charles Browne Fleet a physician and pharmacological tinkerer introduced the first micro enema to be mass marketed over the counter By the city s centennial in 1886 banking activity had increased sixfold over the 1860 level which some attributed to slavery s demise The Lynchburg Cotton Mill and Craddock Terry Shoe Co which would become the largest shoe manufacturer in the South were founded in 1888 The Reusens hydroelectric dam began operating in 1903 and soon delivered more power 16 In 1886 Virginia Baptists founded a training school the Lynchburg Baptist Seminary It began to offer a college level program to African American students in 1900 Now named the Virginia University of Lynchburg it is the city s oldest institution of higher learning Not far outside town Randolph Macon Woman s College and Sweet Briar College were founded as women s colleges in 1893 and 1901 respectively In 1903 the Christian Church Disciples of Christ founded Lynchburg Christian College later Lynchburg College in what had been the Westover Hotel resort which went bankrupt in the Panic of 1901 During the 2018 19 school year the college s name was changed to the University of Lynchburg reflecting its expansion of graduate level programs and research Lynchburg s first public library Jones Memorial Library opened in 1907 16 nbsp World War I Memorial in downtown LynchburgDuring World War I the city s factories supported the war effort and the area also supplied troops The city powered through the Roaring Twenties and survived the Great Depression Its first radio station WLVA began in 1930 and its airport opened in 1931 In 1938 the former fairgrounds were redeveloped as side by side baseball and football stadiums 16 World War II and after Edit Lynchburg s factories again worked 24 hours daily during World War II In 1955 both General Electric and Babcock amp Wilcox built high technology factories in the area 16 Lynchburg lost its bid to gain access to an interstate highway In the late 1950s interested citizens including Virginia Senator Mosby G Perrow Jr asked the federal government to change its long planned route for the interstate highway now known as I 64 between Clifton Forge and Richmond 17 Since the 1940s maps of the federal interstate highway system showed a proposed northern route bypassing the manufacturing centers at Lynchburg and Roanoke But federal officials assured Virginia that the state would decide the route 18 Although initially favoring that northern route Virginia s State Highway Commission eventually supported a southern route from Richmond via US 360 and US 460 which connected Lynchburg and Roanoke via US 220 from Roanoke to Clifton Forge then continued west following US 60 into West Virginia 19 However in July 1961 Governor J Lindsay Almond and US Secretary of Commerce Luther Hodges announced that the route would not be changed 20 Lynchburg was left as the only city with a population in excess of 50 000 at the time that was not served by an interstate 21 The Virginia State Colony for Epileptics and Feebleminded now known as the Central Virginia Training School was established outside Lynchburg in Madison Heights For several decades throughout the mid 20th century the state of Virginia authorized compulsory sterilization of the mentally retarded for the purpose of eugenics The operations were carried out at the institution An estimated 8 300 Virginians were relocated to Lynchburg and sterilized there making the city a dumping ground of sorts for the feeble minded poor blind epileptic and those otherwise seen as genetically unfit 22 Carrie Buck challenged the state sterilization but it was finally upheld by the United States Supreme Court in Buck v Bell She was classified as feeble minded and sterilized while a patient at the Virginia State Colony Sterilizations were carried out for 35 years until 1972 when the operations were halted Later in the late 1970s the American Civil Liberties Union filed a class action lawsuit against the state of Virginia on behalf of the sterilization victims In the settlement victims received formal apologies from the state and counseling if they chose but the judiciary denied requests for the state to pay for reverse sterilization operations In 1994 Buck s sterilization and litigation were featured as a television drama Against Her Will The Carrie Buck Story The Manic Street Preachers address the issue in their song Virginia State Epileptic Colony on their 2009 album Journal for Plague Lovers Modern revitalization Edit Liberty University founded in 1971 as Lynchburg Baptist College and renamed in 1985 is one of the country s largest institutions of higher education and the largest employer in the Lynchburg region The university states that it generates over 1 billion in economic impact to the Lynchburg area annually 23 24 25 Lynchburg has ten recognized historic districts four of them in the downtown residential area 26 27 Since 1971 40 buildings have been individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places 28 Downtown Lynchburg has undergone significant revitalization with hundreds of new loft apartments created through adaptive reuse of historic warehouses and mills Since 2000 downtown has attracted private investments of more than 110 million and business activity increased by 205 from 2004 to 2014 29 In 2014 75 new apartment units were added to downtown Lynchburg with 155 further units under construction increasing the number of housing units downtown by 48 from 2010 to 2014 29 In 2015 the 5 8 million Lower Bluffwalk pedestrian street zone opened 30 Notable projects underway in downtown by the end of 2015 include the 25 million Virginian Hotel restoration project a 16 6 million restoration of the Academy Center of the Arts and 4 6 million expansion of Amazement Square Children s Museum 31 32 33 34 Timeline Edit Timeline of Lynchburg Virginia1786 Lynchburg founded 35 1791 Tobacco warehouse built 35 1798 South River Friends Meetinghouse built 1805 Town of Lynchburg incorporated 35 1806 City Cemetery established Construction of Thomas Jefferson s Poplar Forest begins near Lynchburg 36 1830 Elijah Fletcher becomes mayor Population 4 630 37 1840 James River and Kanawha Canal to Richmond opens 35 Population 6 395 37 1850 Population 8 071 37 1852 Virginia amp Tennessee Railroad begins operating 36 City of Lynchburg incorporated 35 Lynchburg Daily Virginian newspaper begins publication 38 1855 Lynchburg Courthouse built 35 1856 Methodist Protestant Lynchburg College established 35 1864 June 17 18 Battle of Lynchburg fought near city during the American Civil War 36 1866 Southern Memorial Association founded 39 1870 September Flood 40 1879 George D Witt Shoe Corporation in business 1880 James Albert Bonsack invents cigarette rolling machine 1886 First Baptist Church built 1888 Virginia Theological Seminary founded 36 1893 Randolph Macon Woman s College opens 35 1895 St Paul s Church built 1898 Confederate Infantryman monument erected 35 1900 Population 18 891 1903 Virginia Christian College founded 36 1908 Jones Memorial Library opens 41 1912 Equal Suffrage League formed 35 1913 Statue of John Warwick Daniel erected 35 1920 Little Theater established 35 1928 Monument Terrace built 35 1930 WLVA radio begins broadcasting 42 Population 40 661 1932 Civic Art League founded 35 1940 City Stadium opens 43 1953 WLVA TV television begins broadcasting 44 1954 Carter Glass Memorial Bridge opens 1959 Pittman Plaza shopping centre in business 43 1966 Lynchburg Public Library opens 41 Central Virginia Community College 36 and Lynchburg Baseball Corporation established 43 1971 Lynchburg Baptist College later Liberty University founded 36 1978 Point of Honor house museum opens 1980 Population 66 743 1990 President George H W Bush gives commencement speech at Liberty University 45 1993 Bob Goodlatte becomes U S representative for Virginia s 6th congressional district 46 1995 Lynchburg Hillcats baseball team active 2000 City website online approximate date 47 48 2010 Population 75 568 49 2016 Joan Foster becomes mayor 2017 President Donald Trump gives commencement speech at Liberty University 45 2023 Stephanie Reed becomes mayor Geography EditAccording to the United States Census Bureau the city has a total area of 49 6 square miles 128 5 km2 of which 49 2 square miles 127 4 km2 is land and 0 5 square miles 1 3 km2 1 0 is water 50 Neighborhoods Edit The first neighborhoods of Lynchburg developed upon seven hills adjacent to the original ferry landing 51 These neighborhoods include Court House Hill original hill College Hill Daniel s Hill Diamond Hill Grace Street Washington Street Federal Hill Franklin Hill Garland Hill White Rock Hill Florida Avenue Other major neighborhoods with more upside include Tinbridge Hill Boonsboro Trents Ferry Rivermont Fairview Heights Campbell Ave corridor Jackson Heights Federal Hill Federal Street Jackson Street Harrison Street Fort Hill Forest Hill Old Forest Rd Area Timberlake Windsor Hills Sandusky Sheffield Linkhorne Cornerstone and Wyndhurst Climate Edit Lynchburg has a four season humid subtropical climate Koppen Cfa with cool winters and hot humid summers The monthly daily average temperature ranges from 35 9 F 2 2 C in January to 76 0 F 24 4 C in July 52 Nights tend to be significantly cooler than days throughout much of the year due in part to the moderate elevation In a typical year there are 27 4 days with a high temperature 90 F 32 C or above and 6 2 days with a high of 32 F 0 C or below 52 53 Snowfall averages 11 6 inches 29 cm per season but this amount varies highly with each winter the snowiest winter is 1995 96 with 56 8 in 144 cm of snow but the following winter recorded only trace amounts the least on record 54 Temperature extremes range from 106 F 41 C recorded on July 10 1936 down to 11 F 24 C recorded on February 20 2015 52 However several decades may pass between 100 and 0 F 38 and 18 C readings with the last such occurrences being July 8 2012 and February 20 2015 respectively 52 Climate data for Lynchburg Virginia Lynchburg Regional Airport 1991 2020 normals a extremes 1893 present b Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 80 27 82 28 92 33 95 35 100 38 104 40 106 41 105 41 102 39 98 37 84 29 79 26 106 41 Mean maximum F C 67 19 70 21 79 26 86 30 89 32 93 34 95 35 94 34 90 32 84 29 75 24 68 20 96 36 Average high F C 46 0 7 8 49 6 9 8 58 2 14 6 68 8 20 4 75 9 24 4 83 2 28 4 86 9 30 5 85 2 29 6 78 9 26 1 68 9 20 5 58 2 14 6 49 0 9 4 67 4 19 7 Daily mean F C 35 9 2 2 38 8 3 8 46 4 8 0 56 1 13 4 64 2 17 9 72 0 22 2 76 0 24 4 74 5 23 6 68 0 20 0 57 0 13 9 46 5 8 1 38 9 3 8 56 2 13 4 Average low F C 25 8 3 4 28 0 2 2 34 6 1 4 43 5 6 4 52 5 11 4 60 7 15 9 65 0 18 3 63 8 17 7 57 1 13 9 45 1 7 3 34 8 1 6 28 9 1 7 45 0 7 2 Mean minimum F C 7 14 12 11 18 8 29 2 38 3 50 10 56 13 55 13 43 6 30 1 21 6 14 10 5 15 Record low F C 10 23 11 24 5 15 20 7 30 1 40 4 49 9 45 7 35 2 21 6 8 13 4 20 11 24 Average precipitation inches mm 3 46 88 2 91 74 3 76 96 3 45 88 3 98 101 3 82 97 4 19 106 3 22 82 3 96 101 3 12 79 3 39 86 3 50 89 42 76 1 086 Average snowfall inches cm 3 5 8 9 3 6 9 1 2 4 6 1 0 1 0 25 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 5 1 11 6 29 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 9 9 9 5 11 1 10 2 12 1 10 9 11 8 9 7 8 5 7 7 8 1 9 4 118 9Average snowy days 0 1 in 1 7 1 8 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 5 7Mean monthly sunshine hours 167 0 168 2 221 7 243 7 272 3 287 5 273 4 256 6 226 5 215 4 169 6 155 9 2 657 8Percent possible sunshine 54 56 60 62 62 65 61 61 61 62 55 52 60Source NOAA sun 1961 1990 52 53 55 Seven Hills Edit One of the most prominent nicknames of Lynchburg is the City of Seven Hills This is due to one prominent feature of its geography the seven hills that are spread throughout the region The seven hills are College Hill Garland Hill Daniel s Hill Federal Hill Diamond Hill White Rock Hill and Franklin Hill 56 Adjacent counties Edit Amherst County Virginia northeast Bedford County Virginia west northwest Campbell County Virginia south southeastDemographics EditHistorical population CensusPop Note 18304 630 18406 39538 1 18508 07126 2 18606 853 15 1 18706 825 0 4 188015 959133 8 189019 70923 5 190018 891 4 2 191029 49456 1 192030 0702 0 193040 66135 2 194044 5419 5 195047 7277 2 196054 79014 8 197054 083 1 3 198066 74323 4 199066 049 1 0 200065 269 1 2 201075 56815 8 202079 0094 6 U S Decennial Census 57 1790 1960 58 1900 1990 59 1990 2000 60 2010 61 2020 62 2020 census Edit Lynchburg city Virginia Demographic Profile NH Non Hispanic Race Ethnicity Pop 2010 61 Pop 2020 62 2010 2020White alone NH 47 574 47 654 62 96 60 31 Black or African American alone NH 21 984 21 228 29 09 26 87 Native American or Alaska Native alone NH 200 200 0 26 0 25 Asian alone NH 1 852 1 752 2 45 2 22 Pacific Islander alone NH 27 34 0 04 0 04 Some Other Race alone NH 184 669 0 24 0 85 Mixed Race Multi Racial NH 1 447 3 592 1 91 4 55 Hispanic or Latino any race 2 300 3 880 3 04 4 91 Total 75 568 79 009 100 00 100 00 Note the U S Census treats Hispanic Latino as an ethnic category This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category Hispanics Latinos can be of any race 2010 census Edit As of the 2010 census 63 there were 75 568 people 25 477 households and 31 992 families residing in the city The population density was 1 321 5 people per square mile 510 2 people km2 There were 27 640 housing units at an average density of 559 6 units per square mile 216 1 units km2 The racial makeup of the city was 63 0 White 29 3 African American 0 2 Native American 2 5 Asian 0 04 Pacific Islander 0 63 from other races and 1 7 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race were 3 0 of the population There were 25 477 households out of which 27 8 had children under the age of 18 living with them 41 6 were married couples living together 16 0 had a female householder with no husband present and 38 8 were non families 32 7 of all households were made up of individuals and 12 9 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 30 and the average family size was 2 92 The age distribution of the city had 22 1 under the age of 18 15 5 from 18 to 24 25 3 from 25 to 44 20 8 from 45 to 64 and 16 3 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 35 years For every 100 females there were 84 2 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 79 1 males The median income for a household in the city was 32 234 and the median income for a family was 40 844 Males had a median income of 31 390 versus 22 431 for females The per capita income for the city was 18 263 About 12 3 of families and 15 9 of the population were below the poverty line including 22 4 of those under age 18 and 10 7 of those age 65 or over Lynchburg ranks below the 2006 median annual household income for the U S as a whole which was 48 200 according to the US Census Bureau 64 In 2009 almost 27 of Lynchburg children lived in poverty The state average that year was 14 65 Economy Edit nbsp Bank of the James in Lynchburg nbsp Allied Arts Building in Downtown Lynchburg completed in 1931Of Virginia s larger metro areas Forbes Magazine ranked Lynchburg the 5th best place in Virginia for business in 2006 with Virginia being the best state in the country for business 66 In the same survey Lynchburg achieved the rank of 109th in the nation Industries within the Lynchburg MSA include nuclear technology pharmaceuticals and material handling A diversity of small businesses with the region has helped maintain a stable economy and has minimized the impacts of nation wide economic downturns 67 68 Government Edit nbsp Lynchburg City HallLynchburg uses a council manager system The Lynchburg City Council is composed of seven members that each serve a four year term There are four wards that elect a member the remaining three are elected in at large elections in which the top three candidates obtain a seat The City Council is also responsible for appointing a city manager city attorney and city clerk The current council members are 69 MaryJane Dolan Mayor Ward I Beau Wright Vice Mayor at large Sterling Wilder Ward II Jeff Helgeson Ward III Chris Faraldi Ward IV Randy Nelson at large Treney Tweedy at large List of mayors of Lynchburg Virginia Edit John Wiatt 1806 70 Roderick Taliaferro 1807 Samuel J Harrison 1808 John Lynch Jr 1809 M Lambert 1810 John Schoolfield 1811 James Stewart 1812 Robert Morris 1813 Samuel J Harrison 1814 James Stewart 1815 John M Gordon 1816 Samuel J Harrison 1817 William Morgan 1818 James Stewart 1819 John Thurman 1820 Micajah Davis 1821 John Hancock 1822 Thomas A Holcombe 1823 Albon McDaniel 1824 John Victor 1825 Albon McDaniel 1826 Christopher Winfree 1827 Albon McDaniel 1828 Ammon Hancock 1829 Elijah Fletcher 1830 John R D Payne 1831 Elijah Fletcher 1833 John M Warwick 1833 Henry M Didlake 1834 Samuel J Wiatt 1835 Pleasant Labby 1836 Ammon Hancock 1837 Martin W Davenport 1838 John R D Payne 1839 Samuel Nowlin 1840 Ammon Hancock 1841 Henry M Didlake 1842 Edwin Mathews 1843 David W Burton 1844 M Hart 1845 Henry M Didlake 1846 Daniel J Warwick 1847 Henry 0 Schoolfield 1848 Edwin Mathews 1849 Henry M Didlake 1850 William D Branch 1851 Albon McDaniel 1869 James M Cobbs 1870 George H Burch 1872 Samuel A Bailey 1876 Samuel Griffin Wingfield 1880 71 A H Pettigrew 1882 Nathaniel Clayton Manson Jr 1884 1891 72 Robert D Yancey circa 1900 73 Royston Jester Jr circa 1918 74 L E Litchford circa 1937 75 Clarence G Burton 1946 1948 76 Jerome V Morrison circa 1952 75 John L Suttenfield circa 1953 1956 75 Leighton B Dodd Circa 1973 Elliott Shearer circa 1982 77 Jimmie Bryan circa 1986 74 M W Teedy Thornhill Jr 1991 1992 78 James S Whitaker 1994 1998 79 Carl B Hutcherson Jr circa 2002 2005 80 Michael Gillette circa 2015 81 Joan Foster 2016 2018 81 Treney Tweedy 2018 2020 82 MaryJane Dolan 2020 2022 83 Stephanie Reed 2023 present 84 Education EditColleges and universities Edit Public schools Edit Central Virginia Community College 85 Private schools Edit nbsp DeMoss Learning Center at Liberty UniversityLiberty University 86 University of Lynchburg 87 Randolph College 88 Virginia University of Lynchburg 89 Sweet Briar College located in nearby Sweet Briar Virginia 90 Primary and secondary schools Edit Public schools Edit nbsp Thomas C Miller Elementary School for InnovationThe city is served by the Lynchburg City Public Schools The school board is appointed by the Lynchburg City Council E C Glass High School 2111 Memorial Ave 91 Heritage High School 3020 Wards Ferry Rd 92 Linkhorne Middle School 2525 Linkhorne Dr 93 Paul Laurence Dunbar Middle School 1208 Polk St 94 Sandusky Middle School 805 Chinook Place 95 William Marvin Bass Elementary School 96 Bedford Hills Elementary School 97 Dearington Elementary School for Innovation 98 Heritage Elementary School 99 Linkhorne Elementary School 100 Paul M Munro Elementary School Perrymont Elementary School Robert S Payne Elementary School Sandusky Elementary School Sheffield Elementary School Thomas C Miller Elementary School for Innovation 101 Lynchburg is also home to the Central Virginia Governor s School for Science and Technology located in Heritage High School This magnet school consists of juniors and seniors selected from each of the Lynchburg area high schools As one of eighteen Governor s Schools in Virginia the Central Virginia Governor s School focuses on infusing technology into both the math and science curriculum Private schools Edit The city is also home to a number of religious and non religious private schools including Appomattox Christian Academy Desmond T Doss Christian Academy James River Day School Liberty Christian Academy New Covenant Classical Christian School Temple Christian School Virginia Episcopal School and New Vistas School Health care EditCentra Lynchburg General Hospital Lynchburg VA Centra Virginia Baptist Hospital Lynchburg VA Community Health Center Lynchburg VA 102 Transportation EditLocal transit Edit The Greater Lynchburg Transit Company GLTC operates the local public transport bus service within the city The GLTC additionally provides the shuttle bus service on the Liberty University campus The GLTC selected a property directly across from Lynchburg Kemper Street Station as its top choice of sites upon which to build the new transfer center for their network of public buses They were interested in facilitating intermodal connections between GLTC buses and the intercity bus and rail services which operate from that location The project was completed and opened to the public on June 16 2014 103 104 On August 23 2017 the GLTC launched The Hopper a free downtown circulator bus with a 479 348 grant from the Virginia Smart Scale program 105 106 On June 29 2019 the GLTC ended service for The Hopper due to consistently low ridership and the expiration of a 117 820 state grant that covered operating costs 107 nbsp Greyhound and Amtrak operate from Kemper Street StationIntercity transit Edit Intercity passenger rail and bus services are based out of Kemper Street Station a historic three story train station recently restored and converted by the city of Lynchburg to serve as an intermodal hub for the community The station is located at 825 Kemper Street 108 Bus Edit Greyhound Lines located their bus terminal in the main floor of Kemper Street Station following its 2002 restoration 108 Greyhound offers transport to other cities throughout Virginia the U S Canada and Mexico Rail Edit Amtrak s long distance Crescent and a Northeast Regional connect Lynchburg with Boston New York Philadelphia Baltimore Washington Charlotte Atlanta Birmingham New Orleans and intermediate points In October 2009 Lynchburg became the southern terminus for a Northeast Regional that previously had overnighted in Washington The forecast ridership was 51 000 for the 180 mile extension s first year but the actual count was triple that estimate and the train paid for itself without any subsidy 109 By FY 2015 the Regional had 190 000 riders The Lynchburg station alone served a total of 85 000 riders in 2015 It is located in the track level ground floor of Kemper Street Station 110 Lynchburg has two major freight railroads It is the crossroads of two Norfolk Southern lines One is the former mainline of the Southern Railway upon which Kemper Street Station is situated NS has a classification yard located next to the shopping mall Various yard jobs can be seen Railfans who wish to visit the NS Lynchburg yard are advised to inquire with an NS official CSX Transportation also has a line through the city and a small yard Air Edit Lynchburg Regional Airport is solely served by American Eagle to Charlotte North Carolina American Eagle a subsidiary of American Airlines is the only current scheduled airline service provider with seven daily arrivals and departures to Charlotte Douglas International Airport In recent years air travel has increased with 157 517 passengers flying in and out of the airport in 2012 representing 78 of the total aircraft load factor for that time period Highway Edit Primary roadways include U S Route 29 U S Route 501 U S Route 221 running north south and U S Highway 460 Richmond Highway running east west While Lynchburg is the largest city in Virginia not served by an interstate parts of Route 29 have been upgraded to interstate standards and significant improvements have been made to Highway 460 in the immediate vicinity to Lynchburg and suburban areas Arts and culture EditIn a Forbes magazine survey Lynchburg ranked 189 for cultural and leisure out of 200 cities surveyed 111 Lynchburg Symphony Orchestra Created in 1983 throughout the years a variety of music has been presented from the classical to the patriotic to the popular 112 Academy of Fine Arts Greater Lynchburg s center for arts culture and community building 113 Commerce Street Theater 114 Renaissance Theater The longest running community theater in the area open for over 25 years Lynchburg Art Club Formed in March 1895 Opera on the James Opera performed by national and regional artists in a wide variety of venues since 2005 including classic grand operas small scale lesser known operas contemporary works family operas concerts of diverse repertoire lectures school tours and free community outreach The Maier Museum of Art The museum is located on the campus of Randolph College and features works by American artists of the 19th and 20th centuries Riverviews Artspace A nonprofit arts organization presenting contemporary art exhibitions multi disciplinary programs and events Wolfbane Productions An award winning performing arts organization with year round performances and cultural events Attractions and entertainment EditThe following attractions are located within the Lynchburg MSA Amazement Square Central Virginia s first multidisciplinary hands on children s museum Appomattox Courthouse The site of the Battle of Appomattox Court House where the surrender of the Confederate Army under Robert E Lee to Union commander Ulysses S Grant took place on April 9 1865 effectively ending the American Civil War Crabtree Falls The longest waterfall east of the Mississippi River is located in Nelson County Virginia The trail leads hikers along a 1 7 mile hike with views of five cascades of Crabtree Falls The land formerly in private ownership prior to the late 1970s is in the George Washington National Forest Crabtree Falls sits near two undeveloped mountainous areas designated as Wilderness areas The Priest amp Three Ridges respectfully Since 1982 thirty 30 people have fallen to their deaths due to navigating too far away from the trail There are warning signs at the public trailhead because of this James River Heritage Trail Composed of two smaller trails the Blackwater Creek Bikeway and RiverWalk 115 Trails of Blackwater Creek a network of paved and unpaved trails weaving through the Blackwater Creek natural area 116 117 Miller Claytor House Pre 19th century townhouse where Thomas Jefferson allegedly proved to the owner of the house s garden that tomatoes were not poisonous by eating one of the fruit 118 Home was dismantled in 1936 and rebuilt at its Riverside Park location where the garden was also restored National D Day Memorial Located in Bedford Virginia it commemorates all those who served the United States during the D Day Invasion of Normandy France on June 6 1944 during World War II Nature Zone A division of Lynchburg Parks and Recreation Old City Cemetery Museums amp Arboretum The most visited historic site in the City of Lynchburg Established in 1806 the Old City Cemetery is Lynchburg s only publicly owned burial ground and one of its oldest cemeteries 119 It is also home to the largest public collection of heirloom or antique roses in the Commonwealth of Virginia 120 The Old Court House This Hill City landmark was built in 1855 Fashioned as a Greek temple high above the James River it is now the home of Central Virginia s best collection of memorabilia furnishings costumes and industrial history citation needed Peaks of Otter Three mountain peaks in the Blue Ridge Mountains overlooking the town of Bedford Virginia and in prominent view throughout most of Lynchburg Point of Honor The Federal era mansion of Dr George Cabell Sr friend and physician of the patriot Patrick Henry and John S Langhorne whose daughter Elizabeth Langhorne Lewis led the fight for women s suffrage 121 His granddaughters include Mrs Charles Dana Gibson the original Gibson Girl and Nancy Langhorne Lady Astor the first woman elected to the British Parliament 122 Poplar Forest Thomas Jefferson s retreat home Jefferson designed the octagonal house during his second term as president and sojourned here in his retirement to find rest and leisure and escape public life Ongoing restoration and archaeology is taking place at the site needs update A future access road parkway is planned between the property and the Wyndhurst community with an existing signalized intersection on Enterprise Drive needs update Smith Mountain Lake The largest lake entirely within Virginia located in Bedford County Virginia and Franklin County Virginia part of the Lynchburg MSA the man made lake features about 20 000 surface acres and 500 miles of shoreline Sports and recreation Edit nbsp Percival s Island section of James River Heritage Trail in Downtown Lynchburg nbsp Hollins Mill Waterfall on the Blackwater Creek Greenway James River Heritage Trail nbsp Lynchburg City Stadium Calvin Falwell Field Lynchburg HillcatsLynchburg is home to sporting events and organizations including Blackwater Rugby Club a local Men s Division III rugby club part of the Capitol Rugby Union of USA Rugby 7 Hills Hash House Harriers The local chapter of an international group of non competitive running social and drinking clubs Hiking areas include the Appalachian Trail Peaks of Otter Apple Orchard Falls Trail Blackwater Creek Natural Area Liberty Mountain Trail System Crabtree Falls Holliday Lake Mount Pleasant National Scenic Holliday Lake and Otter Creek Trail Liberty Flames An NCAA Division I department of athletics competing in 20 sports They are a member of the ASUN Conference 123 University of Lynchburg The Hornets are an NCAA Division III school competing in 13 sports as a member of the Old Dominion Athletic Conference ODAC 124 Lynchburg Hillcats A Class Low A professional baseball team in the Low A East They are affiliated with the Cleveland Guardians of the American League 125 Liberty Mountain SnowFlex Centre A synthetic ski slope featuring Snowflex located near Liberty University It includes beginner intermediate and advanced slopes for year round skiing snowboarding and inner tubing It is the first of its kind in the United States 126 127 Notable people EditDaniel Weisiger Adams 1820 1872 noted lawyer and Confederate Army officer 128 Lynn Bari 1913 1989 American actress Beth Behrs born 1985 actress Ota Benga c 1883 1916 Congolese native who was exhibited in human zoos James Albert Bonsack 1859 1924 invented in 1880 the first cigarette rolling machine Connie Britton born 1967 actress Earl Brooks 1929 2010 racing driver Julie Story Byerley born 1970 pediatrician and vice dean for education for the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine 129 George Cabell Sr 1766 1823 physician Desmond Doss 1919 2006 Medal of Honor recipient for actions during World War II dramatized in Hacksaw Ridge Arthur Earley 1926 1981 Pennsylvania state representative Jubal Early 1816 1894 lawyer and Confederate general Jerry Falwell 1933 2007 pastor and founder of Moral Majority and his sons Jerry Falwell Jr born 1962 and Jonathan Falwell born 1966 Charles Browne Fleet 1843 1916 pharmacist and inventor of the micro enema Vinny Giles born 1943 golfer U S Amateur British Amateur and Walker Cup champion Daniel Hudson born 1987 MLB player for the Los Angeles Dodgers Brandon Inge born 1977 MLB player 2001 2013 12 years for the Detroit Tigers 130 American League All Star 2009 131 Rosa Kinckle Jones 1858 1932 African American music teacher Sacha Killeya Jones born 1998 professional basketball player Luke Jordan 1892 1952 blues guitarist and vocalist Randy Lanier born 1954 professional race car driver and convicted drug trafficker Leland D Melvin born 1964 engineer and NASA astronaut named in 2010 as NASA s associate administrator for education Matt Mills born 1996 NASCAR driver Rosalie Slaughter Morton 1876 1968 physician and surgeon Lucius Shepard 1943 2014 science fiction and fantasy writer William Smith 1797 1887 U S congressman twice governor of Virginia Confederate major general Anne Spencer 1882 1975 Harlem Renaissance poet and civil rights activist who revived and hosted the Lynchburg chapter of the NAACP from her home 132 Skeet Ulrich born 1970 actor whose works include Scream Riverdale and The Craft Phil Vassar born 1964 country singer Bransford Vawter 1815 1838 Virginia s first poet Charles Vess born 1951 fantasy and comics artist Walter Browne Woodson 1881 1948 rear admiral Judge Advocate General of the NavyMedia EditThis section reads like a directory Wikipedia policy generally considers directories in articles to be unencyclopedic and potential spam Please improve this article to conform to a higher standard of quality and to make it neutral in tone If it cannot be properly modified the article is likely to be merged redirected or deleted April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Print Edit The News amp Advance Lynchburg s daily newspaper that serves the Central Virginia region owned by Berkshire Hathaway Lynchburg Living bi monthly periodical The Lynchburg Guide quarterly resource directory The Burg weekly entertainment newspaper published by The News amp Advance Lynch s Ferry a biannual journal of local history Liberty Champion Liberty University student newspaper The Bulletin small monthly newspaperTelevision Edit Lynchburg shares a television and radio market with Roanoke WSET TV ABC affiliate based in Lynchburg WSLS TV NBC affiliate based in Roanoke WDBJ CBS affiliate based in Roanoke WBRA TV PBS affiliate based in Roanoke WFXR Fox affiliate based in Roanoke WWCW CW affiliate based in Lynchburg which was previously WJPR WPXR TV ION affiliate based in Roanoke WZBJ an MyNetworkTV affiliate formerly UPN amp independent based in Roanoke though licensed to Danville WZBJ CD satellite of WZBJRadio Edit WJJX 102 7 Urban Contemporary based in Lynchburg WLNI 105 9 Talk Radio based in Lynchburg WIQO FM 100 9 Part of the Virginia Talk Radio Network based in Forest WLEQ 106 9 BOB FM Good Times Great Oldies Home of Rock n Roll s Great Hits Lynchburg WNRN WNRS 89 9 Modern Rock based in Charlottesville WROV 96 3 Classic Rock based in Roanoke WKHF 93 7 Hot AC based in Lynchburg WRMV 94 5 Southern Gospel based in Madison Heights WRVL 88 3 The Journey Top 40 CCM Christian Radio based in Lynchburg WRXT 90 3 Contemporary Christian Radio based in Lynchburg part of the Spirit FM WPAR network of Contemporary Christian stations W227BG 93 3 ESPN Sports translator of 106 3 Gretna Translator at Timberlake Low power WSLC 94 9 Country based in Roanoke WSLQ 99 1 Adult Contemporary based in Roanoke WSNZ 102 7 Adult Contemporary based in Roanoke WHTU 103 9 Oldies based in Lynchburg WVBE 100 1 Urban Contemporary based in Lynchburg WVTF 89 1 Public Radio based in Blacksburg W208AP 89 5 Radio IQ BBC News NPR talk translator of 89 9 WWVT FM Ferrum Translator at Candlers Mountain Low power WWEM 91 7 Classical Music simulcast of WWED FM in Spotsylvania Fredericksburg WWMC 90 9 Christian CHR Rock radio based at Liberty University WWZW 96 7 Hot AC based in Buena Vista WXLK 92 3 Top 40 Radio based in Roanoke WYYD 107 9 Country based in Lynchburg WZZI WZZU 101 5 Roanoke 97 9 Lynchburg Classic Modern Rock based in Lynchburg WAMV 1420 Southern Gospel based in Madison Heights WBRG 1050 Talk Sports based in Lynchburg also simulcast on 104 5 WKPA 1390 Religious based in Lynchburg WLLL 930 Gospel Music based in Lynchburg WLVA 580 silent based in Lynchburg WVGM 1320 ESPN Sports based in Lynchburg WKDE FM 105 5 Classic amp Modern Country based in Altavista WGVY 1000 AM Talk Radio based in Altavista WAWX 101 7 FM Contemporary Christian Radio in Lynchburg VA AIR 1 RADIO lt ref gt https tunein com radio Air1 Radio 1017 s29872 Sister cities Edit nbsp Glauchau Saxony Germany nbsp Rueil Malmaison Ile de France FrancePolitics EditUnited States presidential election results for Lynchburg Virginia 133 Year Republican Democratic Third partyNo No No 2020 17 097 47 02 18 048 49 63 1 218 3 35 2016 17 982 50 43 14 792 41 48 2 883 8 09 2012 19 806 54 34 15 948 43 76 694 1 90 2008 17 638 51 36 16 269 47 37 434 1 26 2004 14 400 54 67 11 727 44 52 213 0 81 2000 12 518 53 25 10 374 44 13 614 2 61 1996 11 441 49 72 10 281 44 68 1 290 5 61 1992 12 518 50 13 9 587 38 40 2 864 11 47 1988 15 323 64 04 8 279 34 60 324 1 35 1984 18 047 67 41 8 542 31 91 183 0 68 1980 15 245 62 44 7 783 31 88 1 389 5 69 1976 14 564 61 18 8 227 34 56 1 013 4 26 1972 13 259 74 11 4 208 23 52 423 2 36 1968 9 943 54 34 4 305 23 53 4 051 22 14 1964 10 044 59 66 6 758 40 14 32 0 19 1960 7 271 59 33 4 961 40 48 24 0 20 1956 6 806 64 81 3 362 32 01 334 3 18 1952 7 090 64 75 3 848 35 14 11 0 10 1948 2 373 35 17 2 480 36 76 1 894 28 07 1944 2 396 35 69 4 302 64 08 15 0 22 1940 1 966 29 65 4 656 70 22 9 0 14 1936 1 373 26 96 3 697 72 60 22 0 43 1932 1 200 24 31 3 656 74 07 80 1 62 1928 2 730 57 88 1 987 42 12 0 0 00 1924 606 21 49 2 086 73 97 128 4 54 1920 609 22 30 2 096 76 75 26 0 95 1916 353 19 16 1 465 79 53 24 1 30 1912 111 6 03 1 487 80 82 242 13 15 1908 473 32 64 962 66 39 14 0 97 1904 292 22 44 995 76 48 14 1 08 1900 660 37 65 1 081 61 67 12 0 68 1896 1 647 48 92 1 657 49 21 63 1 87 1892 1 358 35 63 2 422 63 55 31 0 81 1888 1 796 46 52 2 054 53 20 11 0 28 1884 1 760 47 75 1 926 52 25 0 0 00 1880 861 38 06 1 400 61 89 1 0 04 Lynchburg has traditionally been a conservative stronghold This predates the influence of Liberty University it was one of the first areas of the state where the old line Byrd Democrats began splitting their tickets at the national level However conservative Democrats continued to hold most local offices well into the 1970s However the Democratic Party has seen a gradual increase in popularity in the city since the 1990s and Lynchburg s political atmosphere has become increasingly moderate In the 2020 United States presidential election a plurality of voters in Lynchburg voted for Democratic challenger Joe Biden over Republican incumbent Donald Trump 134 Biden was the first Democrat to carry Lynchburg since Harry S Truman in 1948 See also Edit nbsp Virginia portalList of cities in Virginia National Register of Historic Places listings in Lynchburg VirginiaNotes Edit Mean monthly maxima and minima i e the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020 Official records for Lynchburg were kept at the Weather Bureau Office from January 1893 to July 1944 and at Lynchburg Regional since August 1944 For more information see ThreadExReferences Edit 2019 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 7 2020 US Board on Geographic Names United States Geological Survey October 25 2007 Retrieved January 31 2008 Lynchburg city Lynchburg city Virginia United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 30 2022 Lynchburg s History Lynchburg Historical Foundation Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved February 20 2014 Spencer Tucker American Civil War the definitive encyclopedia and document collection Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO LLC 2013 1174 Our History MONACAN INDIAN NATION Retrieved April 25 2023 Jefferson Chronology The Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Volume 3 Princeton University Press p 2 doi 10 2307 j ctv301fsm 8 retrieved December 2 2021 William Warren Sweet Virginia Methodism A History Richmond Whitten amp Shepparson 1950 p 151 Patrick Dorin The Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad p 10 Potter Clifton amp Potter Dorothy 2004 Lynchburg A City Set on Seven Hills Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing p 39 ISBN 0 7385 2461 1 Steven Eliott Tripp Yankee Town Southern City Race and Class Relations in Lynchburg Virginia NYU Press 1997 ISBN 9780814782057 pp 10 12 Shifflet Review Steven Elliott Tripp Yankee Town Southern City Race and Class Relations in Lynchburg Virginia H net Bright David L 2015 Confederate Railroads South Side Confederate Railroads Retrieved January 25 2018 A Cherokee Woman s America Memoirs of Narcissa Owen 1831 1907 Edited by Karen L Kilcup Gainesville FL University Press of Florida 2005 p a b Philip Lightfoot Scruggs The History of Lynchburg Virginia 1786 1946 Lynchburg J P Bell Co Inc pp 103 114 a b c d History City of Lynchburg Virginia Additional Interstate Road Systems Approved Petersburg Colonial Heights Progress Index April 27 1958 p 20 Routes of the Recommended Interregional Highway System ca 1943 Minutes of the Meeting of the State Highway Commission of Virginia Held in Richmond September 11 1945 page 12 Opposition to Northern Route Dropped Danville Bee July 6 1961 p 3 Richmond Times Dispatch June 13 1999 A Simple Act of Mothering Poor Magazine PNN Archived August 22 2009 at the Wayback Machine Tyree Elizabeth September 24 2018 Study LU s local state impact is more than 1 billion annually WSET Retrieved September 14 2021 Moody Josh October 2 2018 Liberty University passes 3B in gross assets report says it generates more than 1B annually in economic activity NewsAdvance com Retrieved September 14 2021 Study Liberty University s local and state impact tops 1 billion annually September 24 2018 Lynchburg s Listed Historic Districts PDF Virginia Department of Historic Resources Archived from the original PDF on December 23 2016 Retrieved January 23 2017 Lynchburg s Downtown Residential Historic Districts Virginia Main Street Communities A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary www nps gov Retrieved September 14 2021 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service April 15 2008 a b About Downtown Lynchburg www downtownlynchburg com Archived from the original on December 23 2015 Retrieved December 22 2015 Lower Bluffwalk Grand Opening Article News and Advance August 12 2015 Retrieved December 22 2015 Greater Downtown Lynchburg Projects Google Maps Academy Center of the Arts Article News and Advance October 13 2015 Retrieved December 22 2015 Announcement of Hilton Curio Branded Virginian Hotel News and Advance November 20 2015 Retrieved December 22 2015 Amazement Square Education Center Expansion Archived from the original on December 19 2015 Retrieved December 22 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Federal Writers Project 1941 a b c d e f g Hellmann 2006 a b c Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places in the United States 1790 to 1990 U S Census Bureau 1998 US Newspaper Directory Chronicling America Washington DC Library of Congress Retrieved March 17 2017 American Association for State and Local History 2002 Virginia Lynchburg Directory of Historical Organizations in the United States and Canada 15th ed pp 824 ISBN 0 7591 0002 0 History of Lynchburg Virginia City of Lynchburg Retrieved March 17 2017 a b History of the Library Jones Memorial Library Retrieved March 18 2017 Jack Alicoate ed 1939 Standard Broadcasting Stations of the United States Virginia Radio Annual New York Radio Daily OCLC 2459636 nbsp a b c Nagy 1995 Charles A Alicoate ed 1960 Television Stations Virginia Radio Annual and Television Year Book New York Radio Daily Corp OCLC 10512206 nbsp a b Trump at Liberty University commencement In America we don t worship government we worship God The Washington Post May 13 2017 Virginia Official Congressional Directory 1991 1992 S Pub Washington D C Government Printing Office 1993 hdl 2027 uc1 l0072691827 via HathiTrust City of Lynchburg Virginia Archived from the original on June 18 2000 via Internet Archive Wayback Machine Kevin Hyde Tamie Hyde eds United States of America Virginia Official City Sites Utah OCLC 40169021 Archived from the original on August 24 2000 Lynchburg city Virginia QuickFacts U S Census Bureau Retrieved March 17 2017 US Gazetteer files 2010 2000 and 1990 United States Census Bureau February 12 2011 Retrieved April 23 2011 http www lynchburgva gov sites default files COLFILES Information Technology GIS MapGallery Map SevenHills pdf bare URL PDF a b c d e NowData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved July 2 2021 a b Station Lynchburg RGNL AP VA U S Climate Normals 2020 U S Monthly Climate Normals 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved July 2 2021 Snow Extremes Lynchburg National Weather Service Blacksburg VA Retrieved May 24 2014 WMO Climate Normals for LYNCHBURG WSO AP VA 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved March 11 2014 25 City Facts City of Lynchburg Virginia www lynchburgva gov Retrieved September 14 2021 Census of Population and Housing from 1790 2000 US Census Bureau Retrieved January 24 2022 Historical Census Browser University of Virginia Library Retrieved January 6 2014 Population of Counties by Decennial Census 1900 to 1990 United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 6 2014 Census 2000 PHC T 4 Ranking Tables for Counties 1990 and 2000 PDF United States Census Bureau Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved January 6 2014 a b P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE 2010 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Lynchburg city Virginia United States Census Bureau a b P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE 2020 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Lynchburg city Virginia United States Census Bureau U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 14 2011 US Census Press Releases September 4 2007 Archived from the original on September 4 2007 Retrieved September 14 2021 Rising child poverty in Lynchburg fuels need for more court advocates The News amp Advance November 8 2011 Archived from the original on November 8 2011 Retrieved September 14 2021 Best Places For Business Forbes com Forbes Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved December 19 2016 City Quietly Growing ABC 13 WSET TV in Lynchburg Virginia Archived November 21 2007 at the Wayback Machine Bureau of Economic Analysis US Department of Commerce BEA Bureau of Economic Analysis Archived from the original on May 23 2017 Retrieved December 19 2016 City Council City of Lynchburg Virginia www lynchburgva gov Retrieved September 14 2021 Mayors of Lynchburg Sketch Book of Lynchburg Va Lynchburg Edward Pollock and S C Judson 1887 R A Brock 1888 Virginia and Virginians Richmond H H Hardesty OCLC 68181803 Alison Blanton June 2001 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Diamond Hill Historic District PDF Virginia Department of Historic Resources Archived PDF from the original on September 12 2006 W Asbury Christian 1900 Lynchburg and its People J P Bell Company printers OCLC 2847898 a b Clifton Potter Dorothy Potter 2004 Lynchburg a City Set on Seven Hills Charleston SC Arcadia ISBN 978 0 7385 2461 0 a b c Lawrence Kestenbaum ed Mayors of Lynchburg Virginia Political Graveyard Retrieved March 28 2017 Marquis Who Was Who in America 1607 1984 New Providence NJ Marquis Who s Who 2009 ISBN 978 1 84972 397 8 Lynchburg Applies for Loan From Japan The Washington Post May 12 1982 First African American Mayor of Lynchburg dies Wset com July 3 2016 News 7 at Six Roanoke WDBJ 7 February 28 1998 via Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Digital Library and Archives Virginia News Former Lynchburg mayor Carl Hutcherson Jr finds renewed purpose as Baptist pastor News amp Advance Lynchburg March 14 2010 a b City Council Meetings City of Lynchburg Virginia Retrieved March 28 2017 Mayor Treney Tweedy at large The City of Lynchburg Virginia Archived from the original on September 30 2018 Retrieved September 30 2018 Williamson Jeff July 2020 Mary Jane Dolan elected mayor of Lynchburg NBC10 Graham Media Group Retrieved July 1 2020 Mayor Stephanie Reed at large Mayor 2023 2024 City of Lynchburg VA www lynchburgva gov Retrieved March 20 2023 Central Virginia Community College Homepage centralvirginia edu Retrieved May 14 2023 Liberty University Homepage Liberty edu Retrieved January 19 2023 About us University of Lynchburg lynchburg edu Retrieved May 11 2023 About Randolph College Randolph College Retrieved May 11 2023 Virginia University of Lynchburg Homepage vul edu Retrieved May 14 2023 Sweet Briar College Sweet Briar at a glance sbc edu Retrieved May 14 2023 E C Glass High Lynchburg City Schools lcsedu net Retrieved May 14 2023 Heritage High Lynchburg City Schools lcsedu net Retrieved May 14 2023 Linkhorne Middle Lynchburg City Schools lcsedu net Retrieved May 14 2023 Dunbar Middle Lynchburg City Schools lcsedu net Retrieved May 15 2023 Sandusky Middle Lynchburg City Schools lcsedu net Retrieved May 15 2023 Bass Elementary Lynchburg City Schools lcsedu net Retrieved May 15 2023 Bedford Hills Elementary Lynchburg City Schools lcsedu net Retrieved May 15 2023 Dearington Elementary Lynchburg City Schools lcsedu net Retrieved May 15 2023 Heritage Elementary Lynchburg City Schools lcsedu net Retrieved May 15 2023 Linkhorne Elementary Lynchburg City Schools lcsedu net Retrieved May 15 2023 Our Schools LCS Lynchburg City Schools www lcsedu net Archived from the original on January 14 2019 Retrieved January 14 2019 Smith Rachael 8M clinic opens on Fifth Street aims to increase health care access in Lynchburg NewsAdvance com Retrieved March 26 2018 Petska Alicia Long awaited GLTC transfer center to open next week NewsAdvance com Retrieved March 14 2018 Petska Alicia GLTC opens new transfer center NewsAdvance com Retrieved March 14 2018 Smart Scale Dashboard dashboard vasmartscale org Retrieved March 14 2018 Gore Sherese Local state officials launch free downtown circulator bus NewsAdvance com Retrieved March 13 2018 Chumney Richard June 5 2019 Hopper bus service to end June 29 due to lower ridership NewsAdvance com Retrieved July 18 2021 a b Lynchburg VA LYH Great American Stations Archived February 24 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved February 3 2010 The Editorial Board August 14 2013 Is There Life Remaining in TDX Dream Retrieved December 19 2016 Northeast Mid Atlantic and Virginia Service Timetable January 18 2010 Amtrak Retrieved February 3 2010 Lynchburg News amp Advance Lynchburg Symphony Orchestra Making Music In Central Virginia Since 1983 Lynchburgsymphony org Retrieved May 13 2023 Academy Center of the Arts Homepage academycenter org Retrieved May 13 2023 Commerce Street Theater official website commercestreettheater org Retrieved May 13 2023 James River Heritage Trail Archived September 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine Trails of Blackwater Creek Lynchburg Parks amp Recreation Lynchburg Parks amp Recreation Retrieved March 15 2018 Domonoske Camila August 3 2018 Concerns Of Dam Failure Prompt Evacuations in Lynchburg Va NPR News Retrieved August 3 2018 Miller Claytor House Archived from the original on January 16 2010 Retrieved December 19 2016 Lynchburg Department of Tourism Old City Cemetery gravegarden org Southern Memorial Association Retrieved January 21 2017 Education from LVA Public Speeches on Woman Suffrage Retrieved December 19 2016 Point of Honor Lynchburg Virginia July 29 2007 Archived from the original on July 29 2007 Retrieved September 14 2021 Liberty Flames Homepage Liberty University Retrieved May 14 2023 Lynchburg Athletics website Lynchburgsports com Retrieved May 14 2023 The Official website of the Lynchburg Hillcats Minor League Baseball Retrieved May 14 2023 Construction on Snowflex year round ski slope continues Liberty University December 5 2008 Retrieved February 28 2023 FALWELL S LIBERTY UNIVERSITY TO INSTALL DRY SKI SLOPES Ski Area Management Retrieved February 28 2023 Who Was Who in America Historical Volume 1607 1896 Chicago Marquis Who s Who 1963 Byerley appointed Vice Dean for Education Vital Signs UNC Health Care News September 12 2013 Archived from the original on April 17 2015 Retrieved April 13 2015 Brandon Inge Stats Baseball Almanac Retrieved December 10 2012 Brandon Inge Statistics and History Baseball Reference com Retrieved December 19 2016 Hines Emilee More Than Petticoats Remarkable Virginia Women Globe Pequot Press 2003 128 ISBN 0 7627 2364 5 Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections 2020 November General Official Results Virginia Department of Elections Retrieved November 23 2020 Bibliography EditRichard Edwards ed 1855 Lynchburg Statistical Gazetteer of the State of Virginia Richmond a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Sketch Book of Lynchburg Va Lynchburg Edward Pollock and S C Judson 1887 George E Waring Jr U S Department of the Interior Census Office 1887 Virginia Lynchburg Report on the Social Statistics of Cities Southern and the Western States Washington DC Government Printing Office pp 60 64 Blackford Charles M Jr 1891 Annals of the Lynchburg Home Guard Lynchburg Va Lynchburg Home Guard via John W Rohr Electric Power Printer and Binder Lynchburg Rand McNally amp Co s Handy Guide to the Southeastern States Chicago Rand McNally amp Co 1899 via Internet Archive W Asbury Christian 1900 Lynchburg and its People J P Bell Company printers OCLC 2847898 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lynchburg Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 169 Federal Writers Project 1941 Lynchburg Virginia a Guide to the Old Dominion American Guide Series Oxford University Press pp 246 ISBN 9780403021956 via Google Books Ruth H Blunt 1965 Lynchburg s Tobacco Warehouses Virginia Cavalcade Library of Virginia 14 ISSN 0042 6474 Schewel Michael J 1981 Local Politics in Lynchburg Virginia in the 1880s Michael J Schewel Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 89 2 170 180 JSTOR 4248478 Houck Peter W 1986 A Prototype of a Confederate Hospital Center in Lynchburg Virginia Lynchburg Va Warwick House Publishing LCCN 86 50952 Steven Elliot Tripp 1993 Race Class and Religion Lynchburg Virginia s Great Revival of 1871 Mid America Loyola University Chicago 75 ISSN 0026 2927 John Nagy 1995 Survival of Professional Baseball in Lynchburg Virginia 1950s 1990s Essays in History University of Virginia 37 ISSN 0071 1411 Archived from the original on October 26 2014 Retrieved August 25 2017 Steven Elliot Tripp 1999 Yankee Town Southern City Race and Class Relations in Civil War Lynchburg New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 8237 8 Clifton Potter Dorothy Potter 2004 Lynchburg a City Set on Seven Hills Charleston SC Arcadia ISBN 978 0 7385 2461 0 James M Elson Lynchburg Virginia the First Two Hundred Years 1786 1986 Lynchburg Warwick House Publishers 2004 Paul T Hellmann 2006 Virginia Lynchburg Historical Gazetteer of the United States Taylor amp Francis ISBN 1 135 94859 3 Dorothy Potter Clifton Potter 2007 Lynchburg 1757 2007 Images of America Arcadia ISBN 978 1 4396 3363 2 External links Edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Lynchburg nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lynchburg Virginia GovernmentOfficial websiteOther nbsp Geographic data related to Lynchburg Virginia at OpenStreetMap Lynchburg History old photos of Lynchburg Lynchburg Online The News amp Advance Lynchburg s daily newspaper Blog Lynchburg Museum April 18 2023 City of Lynchburg County and City Records Richmond Library of Virginia Items related to Lynchburg Virginia various dates via Digital Public Library of America Lynchburg Glass Company glass insulators Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lynchburg Virginia amp oldid 1176699089, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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